Word: morgans
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Anthony Lewis '48, Managing Editor; Robert S. Leventhal '48, Business Manager; Joseph H. Sharlitt '45, Editorial Chairman; Shane E. Riorden '46, Executive Editor; Ernest L. Bell '49, Photographic Chairman; and Myron Stein '46, Advertising Manager. Positions on the Executive Board are: Stanley J. Friedman '48, News Editor; Robert W. Morgan, Jr. '46, Sports Editor; Waldo Profitt, Jr. '46, Assistant Editorial Chairman; Roger H. Wilson '47, Telegraph Editor; Richard L. Wattling '49, Circulation Manager; Richard M. Sawyer '46, Librarian; and Robert H. Huntoon '50, Secretary...
Trouble came from the House of Morgan, which had financed the Van Swerin-gens and wanted to keep Young out; from the ICC (which Young insultingly called "that tool of the bankers"). By his lawsuits, Young got to be known as the "most litigious man in Wall Street, who would sue anyone at the drop of a subpoena...
...Main, was the great port where the gold of Peru, the silver of Bolivia and the pearls of Rio Hacha (in Colombia) had awaited shipment in the annual convoy to Spain. The treasures drew freebooters and pirates-English and French; even today the names of Hawkins and Drake and Morgan are as familiar to Cartageneros as the names of Dion O'Bannion and Al Capone are to Chicagoans...
Object Lesson. What would happen to the U.S. economy in 1947 was inextricably tied up with a bigger long-run problem: What would happen to the world's economy? J. P. Morgan & Co., Inc.'s President George Whitney said: "If this country is to prosper we must try to help raise in some measure the standard of living in other countries and thereby bring about a wider market for our goods...
...Henry Morgan (Wed. 10:30 p.m., ABC). Radio's subtlest...