Word: newarks
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Martin Lichterman '39, Brooklyn, New York; George F. Lowman '38, New Canaan, Connecticut; Robert E. Machol '38, New York City; Robert M. Meyers '38, Newark, New Jersey; Lionel F. Miller, Jr. '37, Saranac Lake, New York; Leonard K. Nash '39, New York City; Walter P. Neumann '39, New Britain, Connecticut; John Nevins '39, New York City; John W. Otvos '39, New York City; Joseph A. Rich '38, Hazardville, Connecticut; Samuel Ritvo '33, Hartford, Connecticut; Theodore P. Robie '33, Riverdale, New York...
...manager of the lot. He is also president of the New Jersey Motor Truck Association, vice president of the American Trucking Association. Three years ago, Truckman Winchester conceived the idea of a national truck show, got Standard Oil and several truck makers to sponsor the first one in a Newark armory. Last week, as automobilemen prepared for their 1936 Automobile Show across the river in Manhattan (see p. 93), held in Newark under Jack Winchester's management was the third and most successful National Motor Truck Show...
...Truck Show is held in Newark because Newark is the nation's greatest highway freight centre, because Jack Winchester wants it there and because Newark's vast municipal Center Market Building can be rented cheap. On its two dank floors last week gleamed and glistened a collection of trucks, bodies, trailers, engines and accessories from 60 leading U. S. manufacturers. As in the Automobile Show, the exhibits included gadgets, displays, sections of engines, cinema demonstrations. Unlike the Automobile Show, the Truck Show's exhibits were aimed not at the general public but at the comparative few whose...
Grown grey and distinguished in the service of Education are the three Brothers Farrand who graduated from Princeton when it was called the College of New Jersey. Brother Wilson Farrand, 74, one of the founders of the College Entrance Examination Board, was headmaster of Newark Academy from 1901 until he be came emeritus last year. Brother Max, 67, prime authority on the Constitution, is now research director of Los Angeles' rich Henry E. Huntington Library & Art Gallery. More famed than either is gentle, witty Brother Livingston, 69, who in his 15 years as president of Cornell University has enriched...
...into many ventures, seen most of them succeed. Son of a Baltimore banker, Adolph B. Hirschmann, he studied economics at Johns Hopkins, left at 17, took up music with Peabody Institute instructors. At 20 he got a job as office boy in L. Bamberger & Co.'s department store, Newark. There he helped build radio station WOR, annotated its Philharmonic Orchestra broadcasts for three years, was appointed sales and publicity director at 23. Six years later he took the same post with Lord & Taylor's store, planned their crisp black and white advertisements, recommended more truthful copy, fewer superlatives...