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Colgate Salsbury is wholly professional in the part of a red-pajama'd Irish salesman. His every grumble is funny. As a radical young poet, Woodruff Price seems to have a harder role. Perhaps this is because he plays it with less ease, though still effectively, as does Lee Jeffries in the role of the poet's lover, who sacrifices herself for him. An indignant landlord, John Ratte, sheds humor on the whole scene with his belligerent fist-shakings. Ann Adams and, again, Clare Scott, depict two sympathetic but gossipy old women in the boarding house where a detective, Bruce...

Author: By H. CHOUTEAU Dyer, | Title: The Established Plays | 10/28/1955 | See Source »

John Poppy '57, president of the HDC, has announced that open casting for the play will being this afternoon in Phillips Brooks House, and continue through Monday. Woodruff Price '56 and Lucia Stein '57 will co-produce the play, and William Meador '58 will be the director. Donald Bourne of the Graduate School of Design will design the sets...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Two Dramatic Organizations Will Present Shakespeare | 9/30/1955 | See Source »

...addition Gertrude M. Woodruff a teaching fellow in Anthropology, will study the school structure of the city of Bangalore, India...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ford Foundation Gives Fellowships For Asian Study to Six Students | 5/25/1955 | See Source »

...Coca-Cola Co., the name Woodruff has been as indispensable as "refreshes" in its slogan. It was Ernest Woodruff, a Southern financier, who bought the company in 1919 (for $25 million) and started its expansion. Four years later he turned it over to his hustling son Robert, who soon changed Coke from a corner-drugstore treat into one of the world's most widely sold products. In 1939 Woodruff became chairman of the executive committee, but remained top boss while presidents came and went. This week, 65, Coke's retirement age, Woodruff at last stepped out (he will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: New Boss of Coke | 2/14/1955 | See Source »

Moving President H. B. Nicholson up to board chairman. Bob Woodruff reached outside the company for a new president to replace himself as chief executive officer. His choice: William E. Robinson, 54, the smart, hard-driving and affable ex-publisher of the New York Herald Tribune and chairman of Robinson-Hannagan Associates, which handles Coke's public relations. Bill Robinson, an old friend and golfing companion of Woodruff's, knows his way around in politics as well as business. An early Eisenhower backer, he introduced Ike to the Augusta National Golf Club, helped convince Ike that he could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: New Boss of Coke | 2/14/1955 | See Source »

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