Word: mccaffrey
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Msgr. Joseph A. McCaffrey's denunciation of "coddlers" and "do-gooders" as the chief contributing factors to New York's juvenile crimes [Sept. 14] seems to ignore completely the basic source of trouble. The Roman Catholic Church must accept its fair share of the responsibility. As long as the church insists on its adherents bringing children into the world regardless of their ability or prospects of providing them with decent homes, so long shall we require "more jails" to meet "force with force...
...Frank W. Jenks, 60, president of International Harvester, will become chief executive officer when Board Chairman John L. McCaffrey, 65, retires in May. Jenks went to work for Harvester as a clerk in 1914, rose steadily to the presidency last year (TIME...
...Times. He worked the city's political districts and, in 1938, went to the State Capitol in Albany. There he was a big wheel in amateur theatricals, developed a taste for Scotch and soda and an enduring reputation as a two-fisted drinking man in Matt McCaffrey's saloon (because of his ulcers, doctors now advise against soda, but Hagerty cheats for the forthright reason that "I don't like water"). He also earned a reputation as an industrious, thoroughly competent reporter. In 1940 he joined his father in covering Wendell Willkie's presidential campaign...
...clerk in Richmond in 1914, won a vice-presidency for his work bolstering time-payment sales to farmers as manager of Harvester's credit bureau, was named executive vice president when President Moulder took over. Jenks, who is also slated to succeed Chairman and Chief Executive John McCaffrey, now past retirement age, faces the task of shoring up International Harvester, whose net income dropped $3,000,000 to $31,347,000 in the first nine months...
...Peter Vincent Moulder, 63. was named president of International Harvester at a special meeting of the directors, replacing John L. McCaffrey, 63, who becomes board chairman but remains as chief exec utive officer. McCaffrey's five-year term coincided with the sharp farm-price drop during which the giant farm-equipment maker's net fell from $63 million in 1951 to $55 million in 1955 while other U.S. corporations were setting earnings records. New President Moulder is an old hand at Harvester; he joined the sales division in 1910, became first chief of the company's motortruck...