Word: whitneys
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Five new Advocate officers were elected yesterday afternoon. Julian S. Bach '36 is President; Whitney G. Case '36, Pegasus; Henry V. Poor '36, Secretary; John L. Angel '36, Treasurer; and Gordon F. Robertson '36, Business Manager...
...indulged in no spectacular upheavals upon assuming office, he did display an amazing talent for public relations. He went to Washington for a friendly chat with SEC officials. He closed, almost symbolically, the Exchange's ''Washington Embassy," a rented mansion from which his predecessor, Richard Whitney, conducted his futile fight against the Securities & Exchange Act. In his own bailiwick President Gay lifted the cloak of surly secrecy which had always surrounded even the most trivial Exchange affairs. He submitted graciously to innumerable interviews. He stumped the land hammering home his simple thesis: the New York Stock Exchange...
Other men making the trip are: Thomas Perry, Jr. '36; Bruce K. Fuller '36; Floyd K. Haskell, '36; Charles S. Kelley, III, '36; Theodore P. Robie '38; Donald C. Sleeper '38; and Whitney G. Case, II '36 and William Lawrence '37, managers...
...your finances in order. "I certainly have no desire to annoy you or your bankers, but would be derelict in my duty if I did not do what I could to assist in correcting what I know to be an unhealthy situation. . . ." And, most tartly: "If Messrs. Reynolds and Whitney would try half as hard to effect such a program as I have suggested, as they do in advancing reasons why it cannot be done, your financing problems would be solved...
...Reynolds-Whitney letter . . . imputed to me a proposal that the banks violate the law-which is not true; assuming to themselves more scrupulous ethics. In order that there may be no possible misunderstanding ... I am releasing the correspondence...