Word: stillmans
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Command changes at major banks are usually about as suspenseful as tomorrow's office hours. But not at Manhattan's aggressive First National City Bank. President George S. Moore, 62, was a cinch to succeed Chairman James Stillman Rockefeller, due to retire next month at 65. But who would follow Moore? There was no lack of topflight candidates, as is only fitting for the bank that, with assets of $15 billion, ranks only behind the Bank of America ($18 billion) and Chase Manhattan ($15.8 billion). Moore himself had been no help in the guessing game, having once said...
...scared freshman entered UHS early last year, slowed by fatigue. The doctor he saw told him nothing was wrong and added that he ought to stay out of Stillman Infirmary if possible or he would find himself far behind in his work. The freshman complied, and spent a vigorous day in classes and Lamont. The following morning, he lay in the Infirmary with a collapsed lung...
Even as UHS adds personnel, overcrowding seems inevitable because more people use the various services more often each year. In 1965-66, there were 47,068 visits to the Medical Services, an increase of 3333 over 1964-65. The number of visits to Stillman Infirmary increased very little, but the Emergency Service handled 5850 cases--about 700 more than the year before. There were 1200 more surgical visits, and a 20 per cent increase in the total number of psychiatry patients. Coping with this growth is more difficult than it seems, because the rate of growth is highly erratic...
...husband Maurice T. Moore, a member of the Time Inc. board of directors and a partner in the Manhattan law firm of Cravath, Swaine & Moore; and two early associates of Luce's: Roy E. Larsen, chairman of the executive committee of Time Inc., and Charles L. Stillman, chairman of the finance committee...
...ominously Eastern design. These melodramatic artifacts it transpires, are linked with the title character, (Ellen Anschuetz), a chic but enigmatic actress who is mistress of an elegant home on Francis Ave. She gets her property back with the help of her hirelings, a butler (Peter Jaszi) and a murderous Stillman nurse (Erica Ivers). The pair arranges the deaths of the roommate and girl friends, deaths which are duly certified by Stillman doctors and reported in the CRIMSON. In fact, however, through the agency of a potent serum they do not die at all but are transformed into zombies...