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Word: lowenstein (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...nobody was prepared for two surprises pulled last week by Burlington Mills Corp., biggest U.S. producer of synthetic textiles. Burlington first startled the industry by announcing that it was buying control of Pacific Mills (about seventh-ranking producer of cottons and woolens). Other companies wanted Pacific, and one, M. Lowenstein & Sons, was actively bidding for it. Burlington moved in, raised the bid. By laying out $24.6 million, Burlington, in a day and a half, picked up 494,500 of Pacific's 959,052 shares, last week got control of Pacific's $79 million in assets, 14 factories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TEXTILES: New King | 7/26/1954 | See Source »

...Timothy Anderson, James P. Anthony, George B. Clark, Jr., Richard J. Clasby (Capt.), Joseph H. Conzelman, T. Jefferson Collidge, Jr., Robert R. Cowles, Alan H. Culbert, Nicholas G. Culolias, John C. Culver, William A. Frate, Robert B. Hardy, Richard J. Koch, Jr., Dexter S. Lewis, Carroll M. Lowenstein, John T. Maher, Jerry R. Marsh, William M. Meigs, Jan H. H. Mayer, Jr., Robert E. Morrison, Bernard E. O'Brien, F. Harvey Popell, Brian F. Reynolds, Joseph C. Ross, Jr., Orville M. Tice, William M. Weber, Frank H. White, Francis N. Millett...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 180 Athletes Win Letters For Competition in Fall, 1953 | 12/18/1953 | See Source »

...cannot speak for all of the talent that Yale would put into the field, though with Ed Molloy and Jim Lopez passing to the first string ends, the Elis would certainly be dangerous. Harvard, of course, would field a team of stars. Hardy, Lowenstein, and Clasby would take their usual places in the backfield, and Coolidge would anchor the line. Cowles could be shifted to one end position; and there is, I believe, another eligible lineman to hold down the other...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THREE-WAY RUN-OFF | 11/30/1953 | See Source »

Only a small penalty nullified a perfect Carroll Lowenstein to Clasby pass, a play which found the Crimson captain sneaking behind an Eli just as the spiraling ball fell into his arms. And then, later in the second half, Clasby dropped a Lowenstein pass as he toppled into the end zone. These were two possible scores, but they only made statistical difference. The people who weren't satisfied with the final score were in predominance Saturday--not noisy, slightly more sober, they almost all wore Blue and White scarves...

Author: By David L. Halberstam, | Title: Harvard Completely Outplays Favored Yale, to Win 13-0 | 11/23/1953 | See Source »

...Carroll Lowenstein played his last game today, and this had been a tough season for a fine passer. Injuries, defensive weaknesses, and the difficulty of working in the same backfield with Clasby, had slowed down Lowenstein this year and had prevented him from throwing touchdown passes more than any defensive backfield could have. Lowenstein was a one platoon player in a two platoon game, a T formation passer in a single wing backfield, yet he was always an offensive threat and a credit to Harvard football.CRIMSONStephen S. ShohetBOB COWLES hauls down a pass during the indecisive first period of Saturday...

Author: By David L. Halberstam, | Title: Harvard Completely Outplays Favored Yale, to Win 13-0 | 11/23/1953 | See Source »

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