Word: warren
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...exhibiting that peculiar U. S. urge to sweat in convention assembled, most of the New Deal's onetime economists and a number of other experts gathered in Ithaca. N. Y. for a Cornell Monetary Conference. Much in evidence on his home ground was Professor George F. ("Rubber Dollar") Warren, the only moneyman who sold a major theory to President Roosevelt but who is no longer a frequent White House caller.* Also on hand was Professor Oliver Mitchell Wentworth Sprague, the Treasury's hard money adviser, who quit his post in 1933 as a protest against the prevailing Warren...
...Most definite prediction of the conference was made by Dr. Warren's colleague and collaborator, Frank Ashmore Pearson: "It is probable that the volume of building construction will rise from about 1936 to 1942 and that the value of gold will fall. If these two events should occur, business will be very active and real estate will be a prize possession-not a drug on the market...
...capital elsewhere and enshrining the more picturesque parts of Moscow as a permanent "Museum City." 2) Destroy the present city of Moscow and build a modernistic capital on its site. 3) Preserve the tall-towered Kremlin and fantastic St. Basil's Cathedral, but destroy the whole encircling rabbit warren of crooked streets; enlarge the vast Red Square to twice its present size, and generally turn Moscow into a city of wide boulevards, imposing squares and grandiose parks...
...died. To combat the epidemic North Carolina's State epidemiologist. Dr. Joseph Clyde Knox, has advised against children attending summer schools. President Roosevelt's good friend. Dr. Leroy Watkins Hubbard of the Warm Springs Infantile Paralysis Sanatorium, has gone from Georgia to help Epidemiologist Knox. as have Drs. Warren Palmer Dearing and Alexander Gordon Gilliam, infantile paralysis experts of the U. S. Public Health Service. Dr. James Payton Leake. best U. S. P. H. S. expert, was to be there this week...
...record of four months of such evidence filled 3,000 typewritten pages, which Commissioner Warren turned over to the Mayor. Immediate upshot was that three detectives and a patrolman were dismissed, five police officers, including Chief Culligan, were suspended "pending further developments," grand jury and bar association inquiries were started and anyone in St. Paul who had recently had any shady dealings with the police found himself sitting on the anxious bench...