Word: w
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...David W. Bailey '21, secretary to the Corporation, yesterday thanked the Symphony management for insuring that "the few available rush seats will reach the hands of legitimate students...
...Even Break." Board President Frank W. Blair was certain that Akeley's dismissal would help debt-ridden Olivet increase its endowments; potential donors, he said, had been "discouraged" by the views of "some of the faculty." Olivet's respected town banker, George C. Tyson, was obviously one of the discouraged. Said he: "I couldn't accuse them of being Communists or Reds but they were . . . pink . . . Seems to be in all the colleges-even permeates the churches. A number of us businessmen of the town were hoping to get an administration that would give the businessmen...
...retirement so attractive either? Bauer tells of phoning a music store where he had once been well known. Who was calling? the clerk asked. "Mr. Harold Bauer." "How is it spelled?" said the clerk. "B . . . O . . . W...
...started down, some farmers stopped shipping, hoping that a shorter supply would raise prices. Nevertheless, except for hogs, prices stayed down. The Department of Agriculture, which mortally hates and fears a fall in farm income, predicted that the lower prices would not last. Many another expert thought differently. Mark W. Pickell, executive secretary of the Corn Belt Livestock Feeders Association, said that prices would be "lower in November and December," even lower next year. Whoever was right, consumers thought the effect was healthy...
Died. Richard W. Lawrence, 70, New York financier and Chamber of Commerce bigwig, onetime (1928-29) president of the National Republican Club; of a heart attack; in Manhattan...