Word: myron
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...textiles, in which he made $20,000,000, massive, elegant Myron Charles Taylor went to banking and thence to the chairmanship of U. S. Steel Corp. in 1932. Last fortnight another textile man became a director of U. S. Steel. Almost 20 years younger than Mr. Taylor and still owning an interest in the department store his father owned in Nashville, Tenn., George Arthur Sloan became a U. S. notable in June 1933, when as president of the Cotton-Textile Institute he walked into the White House with the first NRA code ever drafted. His trade association experience later included...
Secretary Mclntyre substituted for the President in receiving this object. But no one could substitute for the President when Myron Charles Taylor, chairman of the board of U. S. Steel, asked permission to call. Obviously Mr. Taylor came to discuss his company's side of C. I. O.'s drive on the steel and motor industries (see p. 17), but Mr. Taylor told the press: "This is not the time for talking...
...President & Mrs. Roosevelt both speak fluent French, his mother habitually travels on the French Line (always asking for the same cabin steward) and the new U. S. Ambassador to France, genial William Christian Bullitt, is regarded as the most pro-French U. S. envoy in Paris since the late Myron Herrick.* The political life of the Blum Cabinet has rested in recent weeks partly upon the success of M. Blum in persuading Parliament that Mr. Roosevelt is friendly to the French New Deal and has ordered Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau to cushion and facilitate the devaluation of the franc...
Headed by Ernest D. Haseltine, Jr. '38, the dance committee includes Frederic W. Fuller, Jr. '39, J. Spence Harvin '39, A. William Marburg '37, William J. Moore '38, Stephen V. N. Powelson '38, Carleton R. Richmond, Jr. '38, Myron K. Stone '37, and William H. Wright...
...stockholders. What was significant was that U. S. Steel's directors had the means with which to be generous. In the past five years the net result of U. S. Steel's operations was a loss of $132,000,000. In announcing the dividend action Chairman Myron Charles Taylor reported that U. S. Steel's profits for the third quarter of 1936 were $13,600,000, for the first nine months of the year, $29,800,000. In the first nine months of last year U. S. Steel lost money...