Word: snyder
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...formally constituted, the Committee includes Patrick D. Dailey '50, of the Student Council; Dow Votaw 3L, of the Law School's Phillips Brooks House Committee; Richard Powell 2B, representing the Business School Student Association; Chandler Davis 2G, spokesman for the Graduate Advisory Council; and Clyde C. Snyder, Jr. 2B, acting in a personal capacity. Their investigation has taken shape in response to summertime editorial pressure from the Law School Record...
Committeemen emphasized that they were out to conduct a fair investigation of the Department and were making no "a priori assumptions." Clyde C. Snyder, Jr., a Business School supporter of the probe, commented, "We hope neither the students nor the University will consider this a purge...
Hang Out Flags. At Sing Sing Prison, Warden William E. Snyder had happy news for the citizens of The Bronx: not a single one of them, he beamed, had been put in his prison during the entire month of August...
...Washington conference was generaled by U.S. Treasury Secretary John Wesley Snyder, a rather unimaginative banker, and by Sir Wilfrid Eady, whose thin face, horn-rimmed spectacles and realistic command of facts make him the embodiment of the British civil servant. The details of the talk between them and their experts the world did not hear. But it heard much of the $3,75° million loan to Britain, and of "discrimination" and of "convertibility" (see INTERNATIONAL) . The conferees could bring about no full solution of the crisis; that was for the U.S. Congress and for Parliament, if a solution could...
...political question at Harry Truman. What were the chances for tax reduction? The President would not say, right out, that there could be no tax cut. But he strongly implied that any effort to reduce taxes next year would get a heavy going over by him. Treasury Secretary John Snyder, patting his round, little private surplus, nodded approval as the President explained his tax policy: cut the debt by taxing heavily in prosperous times. Added Harry Truman: "The international situation has also made it imperative that we plan for a surplus, both in view of the problem of promoting world...