Word: morgans
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...impaired, reasserting the loyalty of his miners, Lewis said that if the President were going to restrain him, "then, sir, I submit that you should use the same power to restrain my adversary in this issue, who is an agent of capital. My adversary is a rich man named Morgan, who lives in New York." It was J. P. Morgan, declared Lewis, member of the Board of U.S. Steel, who determined the policy of the mine operators.* If Morgan would submit to Lewis' demands, "then the business can be disposed of in ten minutes." Otherwise, the letter made clear...
Almost before Lewis finished his philippic against J. P. Morgan, the President was busily inditing another plea: "Whatever may be the issues between...
Taylor or you and Mr. Morgan ... for the third time your Government . . . asks you and the officers of the U.M.W. to authorize an immediate resumption of mining." No immediate answer came from proud, peculiar Mr. Lewis. The Roosevelt patience was at last exhausted...
...Sniffed Banker Morgan: "What utter rubbish!" Mines owned and operated by steel compannies, railroads, utilities, etc. wholly for their own use. * Chief of C.I.O.'s construction workers is Mr. Lewis' brother Denny...
...extremists set out to restore the military aristocracy, to dominate the Gov ernment, to make the sacrosanct Emperor what the brilliant former editor of the Kobe Japan Chronicle, A. Morgan Young, has called - since he left Japan in 1937 -the "Grand Mascot" of warriors rather than of monopoly capitalists...