Word: utah
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Eccles, a staunch Mormon, was also a staunch advocate of the theory that money is a tool to be used, not hoarded. As a young man in Mormon frock coat and silk hat, he had proselytized for the Latter-Day Saints along Glasgow's Clydeside. As a Utah enterpriser, he had used the sizable fortune inherited from his pioneer father to build a small empire of sugar, lumber and construction companies, and 28 banks throughout Utah and Idaho...
...solve the family doctor's problems. In Cleveland last week, a few family doctors spoke their minds. Said a Grand Rapids, Mich, doctor: "At present, the general practitioner can't even remove tonsils in a hospital. He has become a glorified orderly." Said a Salt Lake County, Utah, doctor: "The general practice man is tired of being a reference bureau for the specialist...
...Administration big shots brought into the open. Of the 99 local, state and federal employees listed, most were minor functionaries. Three employees of the Agriculture Department were listed; none was close to grain-purchasing activities in Washington. There were a few dozen Army and Navy officers, none well known. Utah's bald, Democratic Governor Herbert B. Maw was in the market with 5,000 bushels of wheat...
...nation suddenly began sending them relief. The American Red Cross appropriated $100,000 for "immediate stopgap aid," rushed disaster relief workers to the barren Navajo country. A Navajo Trail Relief Caravan Association gathered up food and clothing in California, started seven truckloads on the way to the reservation. Utah citizens helped too. Congress, conscience-stricken after neglectful years, voted a $2,000,000 relief fund for the Navajo and Hopi tribes...
...came from Detroit's music lover Henry Reichhold, who runs the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Reichhold's publicity men snagged newspaper space by calling Prizewinner Robertson a cowboy-composer. Actually, though Robertson did herd sheep in Utah as a boy, he is a music professor at Brigham Young University, and winner of the New York Music Critics' Circle award in 1944 for a string quartet. He had not even entered Reichhold's contest: he sent the score, signed "Nostrebor" (his name spelled backwards) to his New York publisher, who entered it without Robertson's knowledge...