Word: belled
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...opening lineup for the Crimson was: Batchelder, g.; Scuily, r.f.; Burrowes, l.f.; Louria, r.h.; Ogden, c.h.; Mavor (capt.), l.h.; Spivak, r.o.; Blanco, r.i.; Heisler, c.f.; Chun, l.f.; Dawson, l.o. Substitutes were: Aguirre, Ascarraga, Carswell, Estin, Jessner, Wallace, Seamans, Ragle, Gilbert, Mudd, and Bell...
Neither Danny Bell nor Henry Morgenthau answered. But, over the years, the question seemed to bother Morgenthau a good deal. Last week, in Collier's, he began giving at least a partial answer...
...series of six, was put together by a crew of writers who had spent ten months working over the famed collection of 900 bulging scrapbooks (TIME, Jan. 13) which Morgenthau lugged with him when he left Washington in the summer of 1945. First, Morgenthau told how Daniel W. Bell happened to become director of the budget...
Morgenthau thereupon suggested Danny Bell, the Treasury Department's Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits (and now a Washington banker). "Fortunately, Roosevelt liked the idea. . . . Bell and I immediately set out to ride herd over the spending programs." They quickly found that Roosevelt's chief spenders-Harry Hopkins (relief), Harold Ickes (public works) and Henry Wallace (farm payments)-did not take to this treatment...
...which was the economic objective of pump-priming, and he gave destitute people work, which was the social objective." But he was not above using "what we called the 'squeeze play' to get additional funds." Hopkins and his deputies "would wait until the last minute before letting Bell and me know they were overspending, then they would appeal to our emotions by reminding us of the plight of the jobless...