Word: beardsley
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...blue-pencilled. Out of the text was removed a charge that Senators Wheeler and Nye have opposed the impending trial of 33 alleged conspirators, a disclosure that Willkie is writing a book condemning the State Department for "selling democracy short in North Africa," and an unfavorable reference to taxwizard Beardsley Ruml. It was also made known that Senator Wheeler is chairman of the committee that handles radio legislation in the Senate...
...maelstrom of personal and legislative animosities. with the bill still far from finished and the taxpayer, left out in the cold as usual, watching the match from a seat in the third balcony. Neither Congress nor the treasury, both quick to find fault with the plan proposed by Beardsley Ruml, Chairman of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, have come forward with any final plan of their own. It would seem as if their chief reason for opposing the Ruml plan is that someone else thought of it first. After Ruml's five hour session with the Ways and Means...
...bulbous Beardsley Ruml, chairman of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, rolled up his sleeves last week for another heave to get his pay-as-you-go idea across for the benefit of groggy U.S. income-tax payers. Up to now practically everyone from the President down has gone on record for pay-as-you-go "in principle"-always with...
...Beardsley Ruml set out to crowbar the biggest stumbling block now in the way of his plan: the plausible-sounding objection that the Treasury would "lose" a year's income if a year's taxes were "forgiven." Not so, said Businessman-Banker Ruml in a letter to Kansas Congressman Frank Carlson: the Treasury would, if anything, collect more money with pay-as-you-go than without it. The Ruml reasoning...
...Morgenthau planned to remain Treasury Secretary in anything but name, he would have to cope quickly with his burdens of figures and men. Else his tax program would be written by Senator George, Congressman Doughton, Beardsley Ruml and perhaps Jimmy Byrnes-and Henry Morgenthau would become taxation's forgotten...