Word: coxes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Stroke, James F. Chace '38; 7, Raymond S. Clark '36; 6, John R. Clark '38; 5, Leonard P. Eliel '36; 4, Douglas Erickson '38; 3, Robert S. Wolcott '36; 2, Roger W. Cutler, Jr. '37; bow, J. Paul Austin '37; cox, Edward H. Bennett...
Stroke, Henry W. Locke '38; 7, Peter T. Brooks '38; 6, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. '37; 5, John H. Gardner '38; 4, James E. Gardner '36; 3, Henry Lloyd '37; 2, Arthur Beane '36; bow, William C. Haskins '37; cox, Edward T. White...
Stroke, William S. Rowe, II; 7, James L. Tyson; 6, William E. Huenekens; 5, Dudley Talbot; 4, Laurence S. Johnson; 3, Lauren C. Kingman, Jr.; 2, Richard C. Ninde, bow, Richard M. Burnes; cox, James M. Snow...
Stroke, France C. Lawrence '39; 7, David Scull '39; 6, Thomas L. Talbot, II 39; 5, Robert B. Watson '37; 4, Benjamin B. Kirkland '39; 3, Lawrence Mills '37; 2, George von L. Meyer, III '38; bow, Chandler Hovey, Jr. '39; cox, Alvan...
...fellow Yaleman named James Henry Ottley. Young & Ottley promptly established itself by calling the stock-market crash. In 1933 young Mr. Young pulled out of Young & Ottley, moved from Manhattan's Chanin Building diagonally across 42nd Street to the Chrysler Building. There with new backers, notably James Cox Brady, Mr. Young set up an-other investment counsel firm called C. W. Young & Co., with himself as president and owner of 55% of the stock. C. W. Young & Co. prospered. It now has more than $100,000,000 worth of investments under its supervision. But by last week its founder...