Word: schwartz
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Wily Jack Schwartz, chief assistant to Carl Hubbell, the pitcher who now runs the Giants' farm system, was convinced. He told Montague to go get Willie. "Don't leave without signing him," ordered Schwartz. The Braves had already made a "win and if" offer to the Barons' manager-$7,500 for Willie's contract, $7,500 more if he made good. Montague promptly upped the ante to a flat $10,000 for the Barons. After Willie's graduation, Montague offered him a personal bonus of $5,000. Willie signed on as a New York Giant...
...Beautiful Sea (Shirley Booth, Wilbur Evans; Capitol LP). Mostly ordinary show tunes by Arthur Schwartz (music) and Dorothy Fields (lyrics), but Actress-Singer Booth puts a few of them over with a fine, plaintive twang that helps explain the success of the Broadway production. Best tunes: I'd Rather Wake Up by Myself, Lottie Gibson Specialty, both sung by Booth, and Coney Island Boat, sung by the chorus while Booth at the same time sings In the Good Old Summertime to form one of those two-headed duets (e.g., You're Just in Love, from Call Me Madam...
Married. Arthur Schwartz, 52, Broadway composer (By the Beautiful Sea) and producer (Inside U.S.A.); and Mary Grey, thirtyish, Broadway actress; both for the second time; in Sands Point...
...Russia is Ruled," by Merie Fainsod, professor of Government; "Chinese Communism and the Rise of Mao," by Benjamin I. Schwartz '38, assistant professor of History; "Public Opinion in Soviet Russia," by Alex Inkeles, Senior Research Fellow in the Research Center and lecturer on Sociology; and two boks by Barrington Moore, Jr., "Soviet Politics, the Dilemma of Power," and "Terror and Progress, USSR." Moore is a lecturer on Sociology and a Senior Research Fellow in the Research Center...
...departure, and then begin deportation Proceedings. O. S. Remington, assistant director of the Boston U. S. Immigrant and Naturalization service points out that "there is no way to take care of such people under law." And yet, these people may be of the caliber urgently needed here. Charles P. Schwartz, teaching fellow at the Law School, after comprehensive study of immigration laws, points out that "The United States needs the services of students who have special abilities. Yet under the present law, a foreign scholar, even a nuclear physicist, may be denied permission to stay here because of the irrelevancy...