Word: meyer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Acheson '33, N.P. Beveridge '32, H.M. Daft '34, B.M. Davis '32, J.T. Dennison '34, D.B. Dorman '32, J.L. Freeman '32, A.L. Gordon '34, J.M. Keller '32, P.H. Kozodoy '32, E.A. Kracke '32, M.A. Mergentheim '33, B.C. Meyer '32, E.L. Olsson Gr., T.P. Palmer Gr., R.W. Perry '32, M.L. Robbins '32, W.S. Salant '33, Arthur Sard...
Testifying before the same Committee were James Augustine Farrell. president of U. S. Steel Corp. and Eugene Meyer, governor of the Federal Reserve Board. Steelman Farrell said there were unmistakable signs of recovery in his business, added that "foreign trade is going to be the great balance wheel of our country." (Steel operations for the country as a whole increased last week to 29% of capacity, against 28%, the week before.) Banker Meyer was skeptical of the Swope plan for U. S. trade associations (TIME, Sept. 28), joined Messrs. Wiggin and Farrell in cold shouldering the La Follette-sponsored National...
Everyone was shown into the intimate Lincoln Study, second floor back, whence Father Abraham, in his crisis, watched the enemy flag fluttering across the Potomac at Arlington Heights. Flanked by the Three M's?Governor Eugene Meyer Jr. of the Federal Reserve Board, who was director of War Finance Corp. and to whom hurried calls to the White House were not new, and Secretary Mellon and Undersecretary Mills?President Hoover sat at a small desk. In front of him were 36 comfortable chairs. In the chairs were seated his "little Congress," actually a coalition caucus, since those members...
...Knowlton, Jr. '35, A. C. Koch '34, G. W. V. Laise '35, C. W. Lanning, Jr. 35, W. H. Lehr '34, Sidney Levin '34, J. M. Lichliter '33, Andrew Marshall, Jr. '34, Charles MacCracken '35, Louis McClonnen '34, John McCarthy '34, L. W. McGuire '34, G. W. Meyer '35, M. G. Moses '35 E.S., S. D. Oettinger '35, S. D. Pierce '32, R. W. Pentecost '34, R. C. Phillips '34, Richard Prouty '35, E. H. Roorbach '34, C. S. Rugg '35, R. S. Russell '35, E. R. Sargent '34, Malcolm Seymour '35, J. W. Stanley '35, G. F. Stork...
Biggest Factor. To answer this question the President summoned to the White House Governor Eugene Meyer of the Federal Reserve Board and William L. Clayton of Houston, head of Anderson & Clayton, largest U. S. cotton factors. In 1926 Messrs. Hoover, Meyer & Clayton had worked together to move the record crop out of the country and hold up the domestic price. Mr. Clayton then had his foreign agents induce spinners to buy heavily as a good investment, with the result that 15% of the 1926 crop was moved by the Clayton firm. At last week's White House conference a plan...