Word: warburgs
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...Rainey flayed Hard Moneyman Sprague for flouncing out of Washington as a presidential ad- viser. Frank Arthur Vanderlip, ex-banker and onetime enthusiast for Technocrat Howard Scott, burbled his delight at the President's monetary experiment. To answer them up rose the fourth and last speaker, James Paul Warburg. 37-year-old vice chairman of the Bank of The Manhattan Co., himself no monetary conservative, who from March 4 to midsummer stood closest to one of President Roosevelt's many ears...
...James Warburg, son of the late great Paul Moritz Warburg, no longer sees eye to economic eye with the President. Last week he poured polite but pointed damnation on the economic theories of the three who spoke before him. Mentioning money changers," Mr. Warburg said: "The first time I heard this phrase was when it fell from the lips of the President in his Inaugural Address. I did not like it then. . . . What is a money changer? If it is one who desired to change money, that is to alter money, then I wonder which one of us four...
Married. Natica Nast, daughter of Publisher Conde Nast (Vogue, Vanity Fair, House & Garden); and Gerald F. Warburg, second son of Banker Felix M. Warburg (Kuhn, Loeb & Co.), grandson of the late Jacob H. Schiff; in Manhattan. Mr. Warburg was lately divorced in Reno by Marion Bab Warburg...
...whether the Roosevelt administration can stand criticism and how it will held back has come earlier than expected. The general belief was that the Roosevelt administration would encounter its first public opposition when Congress reconvened in January. But the attack let loose by Alfred E. Smith, James B. Warburg, Professor Sprague and others who disagree with the administration's monetary policy is forcing the issue rather early...
...friends of Henry Street, Governor Herbert Henry Lehman (who once worked in the Settlement), Alfred Emanuel Smith (whose native Oliver Street is hard by), the late Theodore Roosevelt and Ramsay MacDonald. Last spring, ailing at 66, Miss Wald gave up her post as Head Worker, succeeded Banker Felix Moritz Warburg as president. In announcing that Helen Hall would become Head Worker, Banker Warburg said: "New York is to be congratulated." Born some 35 years ago in Boston, Helen Hall is as professional in manner as most social workers, but more comely. During the War she did Red Cross work, established...