Word: morgan
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Lowell M-34 KIR 8027 Miller, R. H. '46, Leverett D-21 TRO 8152 Milstein, R. G. '46, Eliot G-11 ELI 0280 Mishara, D. '46, Eliot D-42 TRO 4711 Moffat, A. W. '46, Eliot C-12 TRO 0904 Moot, S. D. '46, Eliot L-32 TRO 6393 Morgan, M. H. '46, Eliot K-33 TRO 5492 Morris, I. I. '46, Dunster F-32 TRO 6725 Mountain, C. F. '46, Kirkland M-42 KIR 1641 Mumford, M. W. '46, Lowell K-11 TRO 3704 N Neiley, R. G. '43, Leverett G-11 TRO 5114 Niles, A. A. '46, Winthrop...
...hotel came to be a focal point for high society, for the world of letters and sport. J. P. Morgan Sr. walked from his home on 36th Street to sip coffee and smoke cigars in the lobby. Mark Twain, in his white suit, used its decorous billiard room; Tammany Boss Richard Croker gave small dinners behind closed doors, invariably ordering terrapin. President McKinley fell heir to the Cleveland suite; Jay Gould, Senator George Hearst and P. T. Barnum made it their headquarters...
...Middleton, D. 1G, Lowell M-34 KIR 8027 Miller, R.H. '46, Leverett D-21 KIR 8152 Milstein, R.G. '46, Eliot D-42 TRO 0280 Mishara, D. '46, Eliot D-42 TRO 4711 Moffat, A.W. '46, Eliot C132 TRO 0904 Moot, S.D. '46, Eliot L-32 TRO 6393 Morgan, M.H. '46 Eliot K-32 TRO 5492 Morris, I.I. '46, Eliot K-32 TRO 6725 Mountain, C.F. '46, Kirkland M-42 KIR 1641 Mumford, M.W. '46, Lowell K-11 TRO 3704 N Neiley, R.G. '43, Leverett G-11 TRO 5114 Niles, A.A. '46, Winthrop J-42 TRO 1174 Nuland...
...railroad, public utility or industrial bonds ever defaulted. The heart of the great prosperity of the '20s, in which the national income pushed up from $66 billions in 1919 to $83 billions in 1929, was based on a strong private capital market in which the Morgan firm led. But in the end The Corner was sucked into dabbling in the stocks of holding companies such as Standard Brands, United Corp. and the hapless Alleghany Corp. Though the Federal Reserve authorities were to blame in not clamping down on the excesses of 1929, the Morgan outfit, as the most responsible...
Into the New Deal. When the crash came, Morgan joined with other bankers to stem the tide. A $240,000,000 pool was formed to bolster the market-a gesture which failed. "There is no man nor group of men," said the top-ranking Morgan partner, realistic Thomas W. Lament, "who can buy all the stocks that the American public can sell." The market crashed on down. In 1933 came the New Deal, and with it the campaign against "princes of privilege" and "economic royalists...