Word: parkes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Hyde Park, he had a succession of callers including Joseph Kennedy of the Maritime Commission; Chairman Douglas of the SEC; Board Chairman James Handasyd Perkins of Manhattan's National City Bank; Broker Paul Shields of Shields & Co.; William Averell Harriman, board chairman of Union Pacific Railroad and head of the President's Business Advisory Council. That these business-minded visitors talked about means of easing up on New Deal restrictions on Business, both Franklin Roosevelt and his callers solemnly denied. Confronted by Washington reports of tax revision, the President avoided endorsing them. Instead, he told his press conference...
...slump and Franklin Roosevelt's attitude appeared to reflect a tacit change. Likewise modified was the attitude of many a business man who has groaned because of unhealthy Federal deficits. The President last week reiterated his intention of balancing the budget in 1939, had a long Hyde Park conference with Chairman Marriner S. Eccles of the Federal Reserve Board, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau and Budget Director Daniel W. Bell. Fearing the medicine of reduced Federal spending more than the disease of unbalanced budgets, businessmen, like the New Deal, began to sing a different tune. ¶ In Boston, where...
That Mrs. McCarthy, whose husband was a Democratic Senator in Landon's Legislature, was not entirely disinterested in producing evidence reflecting discredit on the Landon administration, Kansas was well aware. During her Congressional term, a bitter argument preceded her removal from a park board post to which Mrs. McCarthy felt herself entitled for life. Answer to her charges by Will T. Beck, former member of the State Board of Administration, was that "most of the girls sterilized were sexual perverts, obstreperous, fighters or near degenerates. . . . Parents or guardians . . . were notified. . . . Few appeared to protest." Mr. Beck also produced...
...projects of James Delmage Ross, onetime Securities & Exchange Commissioner, longtime head of Seattle's municipal power system and now administrator of Bonneville Dam, is a standard yardstick for all Federal power projects. Last week Administrator Ross took his yardstick formula to President Roosevelt at Hyde Park for approval. The President approved for Bonneville only, but the idea seemed to be that if it worked at Bonneville the formula would be applied permanently to TVA, Boulder and Grand Coulee Dams and the "little TVAs" of the future. Said Mr. Ross: "We ought to be businesslike about this thing...
According to the advance flyer, the Corps on arrival at Back Bay will march to Park Street preceded by its Band, take subway to Cambridge yards, form, march, form and be dismissed in front of Sever Hall some time after 10 o'clock in the morning...