Word: ballards
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Frederick A. Ballard, prominent member of the Washington, D. C. bar, has contributed an article on "Retroactive Federal Taxation." He concludes that the government, in view of a recent Supreme Court decision, has the power to pass tax statutes which reach into the past for revenue on transactions already completed before the bill's passage...
...Freshmen; and Alfred C. Redfield '13; from M. I. T. at large, Horace S. Ford and Jasper Whiting; from officers of Harvard, Clinton P. Biddle, professor of investment banking; from alumni of Harvard, Kenneth B. Murdock '16, professor of English; from the students of M. I. T., John B. Ballard '35; from the Senior class of Harvard, E. Francis Bowditch; from the Junior class of Harvard, Robert S. Playfair; from the Sophomore class of Harvard, Charles C. Gibson...
...when the monarchy passed away a white aristocrat named Sanford Ballard Dole became President of the Hawaiian Republic. In 1900, when the Republic became a U. S. Territory, he was named its first Governor and the same families, the Castles, the Cookes, the Binghams, the Dillinghams, the Judds, continued to rule. Like southern planters before the Civil War they built up a comfortable society based economically on agriculture. Like the South, also, the mudsill of their society was cheap labor. First they imported Chinese and Portuguese, then Japanese, and, when the "gentlemen's agreement" with Japan was made, Filipinos...
...more than in any other nation including Catholic Italy and Catholic Spain. Most intellectual of Catholic orders, the Jesuits are famed for their colleges. Last week in their Chicago Province (Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Tennessee and Illinois) there was pious rejoicing, for a rich Indianan named Edward Ballard had just given the Jesuits a sumptuous $7,000,000 hotel to turn into a new college...
...Edward Ballard is a modest, retiring millionaire who likes to raise and show horses. He is not a Catholic, not even a churchgoer. Born of poor parents some 60 years ago in the hills near French Lick, he made his way alone, accumulated a fortune in the hotel business and in American Circus Corp. At West Baden, a mile from French Lick where the late Thomas ("Tom") Taggart, Indiana's longtime Democratic boss, operated a famed spa (Pluto Water), Mr. Ballard built a handsome 500-room hotel, surrounded by 585 landscaped acres. Until the Depression West Baden Springs Hotel...