Word: warburgs
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...Lane '22; Roy E. Larsen '21; Neil H. McElroy '25; James J. Milton '13; Arthur W. Page '05; Paul C. Reardon '32; Geoffrey S. Smith '22; Edgar B. Stern '07; Robert G. Stone '20; Paul P. Swett, Jr. '32; Philip H. THeopold '25; John E. Toulmin '25; Frederick M. Warburg '19; Frederic B. Whitman '19; George Whitney '07; and Charles E. Wyzanski...
They are Robert Braucher '40, Professor of Law, Edward H. Chamberlain, David A. Wells, Professor of Political Economy, Arthur H. Cole, Professor of Business Economics, Gottfried Haberler, Paul M. Warburg, Professor of Economics, Alfred C. Handford, Professor of Government, Malcom P. McNair '16, Lincoln Filene Professor of Retailing, and Richard S. Meriam '14, Charles Edward Wilson Professor of Business Policy...
...great fountainhead of arbitration is the nonprofit American Arbitration Association, founded 30 years ago with the help of Charles Evans Hughes, Herbert Hoover and Banker Felix Warburg. With a $500.000 budget, mostly contributed by large corporations, plus modest fees ($25 per day in labor cases, from one-tenth of 1% to 1.5% of the disputed amount in commercial cases), dedicated A.A.A.ers handle about 2,500 disputes a year, 80% of them labor cases, boast that never has an aggrieved party walked out of the hearing room...
...Manhattan's Metropolitan Museum in a wheelchair. Convinced that he wanted to become a museum man, Walker went to Harvard ('30), breezed through the Fogg Museum training course summa cum laude, found time on the side to found (with Balletomane Lincoln Kirstein and Esthete Edward M. M. Warburg) the Harvard Society for Contemporary Art (profaned by other Harvard-men as the Society for Contemptuous Art) and contribute to Kirstein's then fashionable, upperbrow Hound and Horn...
...upshot seemed to be that Warburg and Dougherty have supplied promising leads, but the proof of their theories must await time's test...