Word: morganized
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...University requesting them to report upon the issues raised by the University's action in respect to Messrs. J. R. Walsh and A. R. Sweezy, instructors in Economics. The memorandum was addressed to the following nine professors: E. Merrick Dodd, Jr., Felix Frankfurter, Elmer P. Kohler, Edmund M. Morgan, Samuel E. Morison, Kenneth B. Murdock, Ralph B. Perry, Arthur M. Schlesinger, and Harlow Shapley...
...Bross Lloyd, Mrs. James D. Lightbody, Mrs. Kendrie N. Marshall, Mrs. C. Doughlas Mercer, Mrs. Lloyd Mills, Mrs. George Mixter, Mrs. Junius S. Morgan, Mrs. Elting E. Morison, Mrs. George S. Olive, Mrs. Arthur W. Page, Mrs. William B. Pratt, Mrs. Philip L. Reed, Mrs. Archibald B. Roosevelt, Mrs. John E. Rousmaniere, Mrs. Augustus W. Soule, Mrs. James J. Storrow, Jr., Mrs. Donald C. Watson, Mrs. Richard C. Webster, Mrs. Edward A. Whitney, Mrs. Charles G. Winslow, Mrs. Orrin G. Wood, Mrs. Turnbull Wood and Mrs. William L. Wood...
Effect of the legislation would have been to bar from Ohio whiskeys distilled in such big producing States as Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland and Pennsylvania; brandies from California and New York; rum from Massachusetts. Upon hearing English-educated Mr. Morgan's distasteful forecast, Ohio's legislators killed the measure...
Although Forbes Morgan had been occupied with the fight between producers and Pennsylvania at the time of his death, it was not because of this one fight that liquor interests last week badly needed a new front man. On the eve of the Kentucky Derby fortnight ago in Louisville, an assembly of liquor men who make up the Distilled Spirits Institute received word from California that the State Legislature had passed and sent to Governor Frank Merriam an "antidiscrimination" liquor bill not unlike Missouri's. Prime purpose of the bill is to protect proud California's wine growers...
...trend of events in California served to prod liquor men into searching more quickly for a new front man. Because the late Forbes Morgan's close tie with the White House had caused comment, Chairman Brown and colleagues last week were looking for someone not too closely identified with the Administration, yet on good terms with it. Besides a Washington calling card, the Institute wants a man with a pleasing personality who under no circumstances can be called a stuffed shirt...