Word: chase
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...school. Purpose of this school was to show some 30.000 New Yorkers per day what to do with the spare time that was supposedly theirs under NRA codes of shorter hours and higher pay. The Advisory Board of Macy's show included President Butler of Columbia and Chancellor Chase of New York University. Presidents Dodds of Princeton and Angell of Yale sent solemn letters of endorsement...
Forty-eight hours after Albert H. Wiggin admitted to the Senate Banking & Currency Committee last autumn that he was receiving $100,000 per year "retirement pay" from Chase National Bank, President Roosevelt announced he had begun studying legislation to control high salaries by taxation. He had already approved Federal Rail Coordinator Eastman's "suggestion" that railroad presidents fix their income at $60,000 or less. Then, on orders from the Senate, the Federal Trade Commission sent a questionnaire to some 2,000 corporations whose stock is listed on the New York Stock and Curb Exchanges. Resultant information: executive salaries...
...Federal Reserve Board furnished the Senate a list of salaries paid by banks for the year ending June 1933. Highest was to Henry C. McEldowney of Pittsburgh's Union Trust Co.-$165,000. The next nine were all to executives of Manhattan banks: Winthrop W. Aldrich of Chase National, $151,744; Charles S. McCain of Chase (since resigned), $128,488; Percy Hampton Johnston of Chemical Bank & Trust, $125,000; Harvey Dow Gibson of Manufacturers Trust, $125,000; Gordon S. Rentschler of National City. $125,000; the late Charles Hamilton Sabin of Guaranty Trust, $101,919; President William C. Potter...
William G. Chase '34 (L) defeated Gordon C. Streeter '34 (E), 3-2; Edward P. Davis '34 (E) defeated Robert R. Lucas '34 (L), 3-2; Emmett H. Roorbach '34 (L) defeated Douglas D. Bond '34 (E), 3-2; Alfred S. Hartwell '34 (E) defeated Bartram Kelley 1G (L), 3-2; Sebert E. Davenport '34 (E) defeated Benjamin Rowland...
...splendid play of Frank M. Lindsay 1B, the Mellon House team defeated the Chase team in a Business School League game yesterday by the score 20 to 10. Lindsay made 8 points for the victors and John Parker Ricketts 1B also aided the winning team with six markers. Mellon started with a whirlwind attack which gained 12 points before the Chase team could tally once. Chase then put up a stiff offensive but could not make up the difference...