Word: mccauley
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...Aiken Reed of Pennsylvania (1900), Governor John Gilbert Winant of New Hampshire (1913), and Governor George White of Ohio (1895), lead some 95 Princetonian Congressmen, State legislators, Mayors, bureau chiefs. Princeton Economist Edwin Walter Kemmerer has been money doctor to the world. Thick in the New Deal is James McCauley Landis (1921), Federal Trade Commissioner who is slated to chairman the Federal Securities & Exchange Commission. Harold Willis Dodds and his earnest young men have a high mark to shoot at. Princeton's tradition of public service goes back to Alumnus-Professor-President Woodrow Wilson, to Grover Cleveland, longtime trustee...
First choice for Commission chairman is James McCauley Landis, 34, Federal Trade Commissioner whom President Roosevelt appointed last autumn. Commissioner Landis is a frequent and welcome caller at the White House because he sees eye to eye with the President on rigid control of the entire securities business. He never let the Exchange Bill out of his sight from the time it was being drafted until it was safely past the conference committee. Lean, serious, energetic and extremely able, he was a full professor at the Harvard Law School at 29. A shining disciple of Justice Brandeis, he is regarded...
...laid out in a honeycomb design. Heated to 1,000° C., the mold was topped by a beehive-shaped, three-doored covering. At 8 a. m. outside the plant a crowd of 4,000 had gathered. At 8:30 on the pouring floor quiet, pious Dr. George Vest McCauley, the company's physicist in charge of operations, and genial Dr. John C. Hostetter, director of research, saw that everything was ready. In the deafening roar of gas blowers in the furnace and ventilating blowers cooling the factory Dr. McCauley could not make himself heard. He signaled his orders...
...associate professor of Greek and Latin, president of the section; Modern Survivals of Roman Paganism, Miss M. E. Ireland, Malden High School; "Just a Footprint on the Sands of Time"; A Discussion of Timely Topics, Dr. G. A. Land, Newton High School; Hamlet and the Iliad, Professor L. P. McCauley, Weston College; and Some New Glimpses of Old Rome (Illustrated), Dr. D. M. Robathan, Wellesley College...
This statement appeared also in the Detroit papers, and was immediately contradicted by Alvin McCauley of the Packard Motor Car Co. and Mr. Fisher of the Fisher Finance Corp.; also the controller of the Chrysler Corp. stated that he had no knowledge of any such syndicate. It seems that the statement had its origin with the Detroit City Controller Roosevelt. However, the later editions of the paper stated that no such syndicate had been formed for the purpose of lending Detroit...