Word: telegraphe
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Dartmouth men were glad to learn, last week, that Edward Kimball Hall, vice president of American Telephone & Telegraph Co., chairman of the intercollegiate football rules committee, was at last to fulfill his longtime ambition: to teach at his alma mater, whence he was graduated in 1892. Intimates of Mr. Hall knew that he was as anxious to live in Hanover as he was to teach there. At Dartmouth he will lecture on industrial relations, business management, public utilities, in the Amos Tuck School of Administration and Finance. Incipient Pedagog Hall will not have to worry about teacher...
...Steel Industries" it was revealed that "production of furnaces and mills has kept closely in line with current demands." Also slightly irrelevant seemed the statement that whereas production has been at 74% of capacity, in 1927 this would have been 80%. On the other hand, the news that the telegraph and cable business showed upturns in April, the former now running better than a year ago, was just as decidedly bullish as the report that hardware payrolls in March were off 20% from a year ago was bearish...
American Telephone & Telegraph...
Died. Mrs. Katherine Alexander Duer Blake, 50, onetime wife of telegraph Tycoon Clarence Hungerford Mackay and of Surgeon Joseph Augustus Blake, mother-in-law of Composer Irving Berlin "Always," "Russian Lullaby"); of bronchial pneumonia; in Manhattan...
Justly or unjustly, U. S. journalists suspect that the situation might have been different had the U. S. delegation's publicity been put in other hands than those of Arthur Wilson Page. Mr. Page is vice president of American Telephone & Telegraph Co. (cofounder of, though no longer officially connected with Radio Corp.), son of late great Ambassador to Great Britain, Walter Hines Page...