Under Any Circumstances'

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Under Any Circumstances' WEATHER FORECAST TEEN-AGE DELUGE Fair and cooler tonight, low about 48 Washington is bulging with teen-aged Sunny but cooler tomorrow, high near 64. visitors these days. What they are doing (Full report on Page A-2.) and saying is described In the weekly Temperatures Today feature, “Teen Scene,” on Midnight 60 6 a.m 57 11 a m 70 Page B-4. 2am 58 8 a.m 60 Noon 69 4 a.m 56 10 am 70 1 p.m —69 SheV J yIhenitray WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION New York Markets, Page A-23 103 d Year. No. 105. Phone ST. 3-5000 *k WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1955-SEVENTY-TWO PAGES. Wolfson Wins Warren Won't Run in Court Ruling 1956 ¦ Mill' pew iis n In Ward Case BK > JiH IP Under Any Circumstances' Decision Squashes wk |l|y yl wBL ‘ Stagger System of M -TJP Set to Devote Electing Directors rfejl yy 1 Vaccine Sure Tooling Up' Delayed Flow SPRINGFIELD, April Ul Rest of Life to 111.. 15 (JF).—The Illinois Supreme Court Os Ref ugees, McLeod Says Supreme Court today ruled in favor of Louis E. For Thousands By the Auecleted Press Wolfson in his campaign to win BY MARY McGRORY membership on the part of Mr. Chief Justice Earl control of Montgomery Ward R. W. Scott McLeod today de- Corsi preceded his firing. Warren to- & Co. Mr. Walter was invited to day issued a statement saying fended the administration of appear by Langer The decision upholds Mr. More in Area the Refugee Relief Act before Chairman he will not be a candidate for after he Wolfson’s contention that Ward's a Senate committee investigat- wired the committee President of the United States system of electing three of its ing immigration program that he would be available up Salk Two-Shot Plan the and that “I will not change nine directors at annual meet- and the ouster of State Depart- until 5 p.m. today, when he leaving country. this decision any ings of stockholders was un- Cuts Chances of ment immigration specialist Ed- will be the under circum- constitutional. J. Corsi. “I do not want the charge stances or conditions.” ward at Supreme Court’s opinion Scramble Hennings, leveled me that I refused to justice The General When Senator your The chief issued his upheld a ruling by Circuit Judge Democrat of Missouri, charged appear before subcommit- statement following publication BY JOHN McKELWAY telegram Chicago. —— ——- tee.” his read. Harry M. Fisher of — of a poll ¦ ——: , McLeod, witness which indicated that Judge Fisher ruled that all The decision to give only two State Department Seeks Full Probe of Mr. the first he was first choice for the Re- - as opened its nine places on the Ward Board polio vaccine shots now has of- Refugee Program. Page A-2 the committee publican nomination in 1956 if of Directors should be at stake public hearings, was asked by fered thousands of additional Watkins, Republican, President Eisenhower decided in the annual meeting of share- that in 20 months of o-peration, Senator of not to a - run for second term. Friday Chicago. Washington area youngsters only Utah, why he did not have a holders next in 3>i per cent of the visas Mr. a - year easier, backlog of “cleared aliens” who Warren is former Re- Mr. Wolfson. 43 -old that healthier life the available to refugees and 25 per publican Governor New financier, polio promises. would be ready for sponsorship. of California. Florida and York vaccine cent of those available to rela- He ran for vice president been battling Sewell Avery. been, issued, “I believe that would be im- in has These are the children who tives had Mr. Mc- 1948 on the Republican 81-year-old of prudent administration,” Mr. ticket board chairman might have been left out of this Leod said he thought operation with Thomas E. Dewey, then Ward's, for control of the com- of the program could be McLeod replied. “It would waste year’s original polio com- Governor of New York. pany. vaccination pared to automobile production. a lot of money and raise false plan which only a number of designs, hopes.” Wolfson Hails Ruling "You have to draw up Reflects on Work YOU CAN BANK ON IT: HE WONT hours ago was changed. The tool up and go Into production. Senator Langer pursued the RUN matter, however, saying. "You The In New York. Mr. Wolfson Rayburn change every- It’s an assembly line process,” text of Mr. Warren’s “The decision is a tremen- Former President Truman, back in town for the testimonial dinner, besides giving of hands statement: said. on body the State Department security knew thousands farm victory corporate called his bank and banker, Board Chaicpian Wilmer J. Waller (center), “to something to go on—re- , country, why dous for ifmy is At chief, who is administrator of were in this “My name has been used as democracy and removes the bar- see credit good.” left is Dean Acheson, Mr. Truman’s Secretary of leased enough vaccine to in- didn’t you have a backlog?” a possible State. (Story on A-5.) —Star Chinn. the refugee program, told the candidate for the rier which Mr. Avery has erected Page Staff Photo by Gus oculate 4.2 million more young- I “We never had any assurances presidency. Senator. who allegedly between himself and the real across country. committee, meanwhile, from persons sters the The (farm hands),” "This has been a matter of owners of the business, the decided to hear this afternoon wanted them Mr. embarrassment to me because stockholders. While it was still too early to McLeod said. estimate just how many more from Representative Walter, it reflects upon the perform- “Iam delighted that the one- Pennsylvania, The witness pointed up the Stump to Report A-Tests Never Imperiled shots of vaccine would be avail- Democrat, of ance of my duties as Chief Jus- man rule is a thing of the past CORSI, Page here, whose charges of “Communist” See A-ll | tice of the Unlied States. at Montgomery Ward. I am able the additional vaccine now confident that we will take at least lessened the chance of I “When I accepted that posi- Public, Strauss Testifies j a general scramble for a once- ! tion, it was with the fixed pur- control. The American courts scarce Only leaving have upheld the democratic To Eisenhower item. time and the pose of politics perma- Energy following nently on corporate procedure that have The Atomic Commis- were the result of not arrival of the vaccine will de- Student Asks Traffic Trial for service the court. sion assured Congress today the safety precautions. termine if priorities That Is still my purpose. given us the opportunity to Admiral to Discuss | must be It is Nevada atom bomb tests have i set up. Irrevocable. I will not change bring to Montgomery Ward Admiral Strauss also testified endangered the health of it under or strong, vigorous management Formosa Situation never that the experts of the commis- Mutual Decision any circumstances the American people or affected To Qualify as AF Officer conditions. are with the stockholders owning sion of the belief that the Locally, by company having BY GARNETT D. HORNER the weather. possibility of serious genetic af- the decision the University through number, "Be they many or few. the their own and Btar Staff Correspondent Testifying open Polio Foundation to follow Dr. A of Maryland se- the car’s license opportunity change at an session fects from the small amount of Trooper Knight remaining useful years of my life the to AUGUSTA, April of the House-Senate Atomic Jonas Salk’s suggestion of two nior, whose forfeiture of collat- said. management they Ga., 15— additional radiation produced collateral are dedicated to the service of whenever are Energy Committee, shots now and another around He posted $101.45 on Stump, as commission by the testing program is remote. eral on three serious tsaffic driving the Supreme Court of the United dissatisfied.” Admiral Felix B. who said December, yesterday only the under the influence spokesman Chairman Lewis L. Strauss Representative Repub- came charges makes him ineligible for charge, $25.45 the States. In which work I am in- A for Mr. Avery American Navy commander in the exposure experienced by the Cole. a few minutes after the D. C. of alcohol on not lican, of New an Force commission, has reckless driving charge and creasingly happy.” paid he would comment on chief in the Pacific is concerned American people "has been less York wanted to Health Department had made Air the any Information failure stop decision until he has had area, than the radiation they rormally know if about the same decision. had the forfeiture set aside. $51.45 on the to Statement Is Definitely to study * in defense of the Formosa generations charge. time it. receive every few days from nat- the effect on future Actually, Theodore L. Miazga of will fly here tomorrow for a con- the local health de- Judge petition, by Mr. Warren’s statement dis- Mr. Wolfson wanted the elec- sources.” has been withheld from the partment posi- Hyattzvllle Court yester- In his filed Attor- ural public. is In an enviable Police ney John S. White, Mr. Baker avowing political ambition was tion to involve all nine directors ference with President Eisen- The open hearings apparently day canceled the forfeiture of tion In that it is to start Its Trooper Knight one of the most definite in years. because it would give him a hower.
Recommended publications
  • Montgomery Ward Case, WTCN Radio Broadcast, May 5, 1944
    MONTGOMERY --WARD CASE Broadcast by H. H. Humphrey, Jr. W.T.C.N. May 5, 1944. Montgomery Ward 1 s highly controversial quarrel with the admini- stration got a helping hand from Congress today. The House gave overwhelming approval to a resolution authorizing an investigation of the government's seizure of Montgomery Ward's Chicago plant. The legislators approved the investigation by a vote of three hundred to sixty. The House probe will run concurrently with the Senate inves- tigation already underway. Only the staunchest administration supporters opposed the House resolution calling for a seven-man eo~ttee to decide whether the President exceeded bi s a uthority in ordering the seizure. Adminis- tration stalwarts say the seizure was in accordance with provisions of the Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Law. I wish to take the liberty tonight to give an analysis of this extremely interesting episode in war-time controls by cur government. There seems ~ be an unusually great interest in the government's seizure of the Montgomery Ward plant in Chicago. The s]i8ctacle of Mr. Avery, manager of Ward's, being carried from his office by American soldiers is a milestone in the battle between the Company and the Government. Congress, or some members of Congress, is up in arms. The wildest sort of charges have been hurled at President Roosevelt and Attorney General Biddle. There is plenty o:f smoke and heat, but how about the f'acts. What is the 'record behind the government's seizure? What is Mr. Avery's record in industrial relations? After considerable research and investigation, I have found suf- ficient information to be worthy of presentation.
    [Show full text]
  • Roosevelt–Truman American Involvement in World War II and Allied Victory in Europe and in Asia
    American History wynn w Historical Dictionaries of U.S. Historical Eras, No. 10 w he 1930s were dominated by economic collapse, stagnation, and mass Tunemployment, enabling the Democrats to recapture the White House and w embark on a period of reform unsurpassed until the 1960s. Roosevelt’s New Deal laid the foundations of a welfare system that was further consolidated by roosevelt–truman roosevelt–truman American involvement in World War II and Allied victory in Europe and in Asia. This economic recovery also brought enormous demographic and social changes, HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF THE OF DICTIONARY HISTORICAL some of which continued after the war had ended. But further political reform was limited because of the impact of the Cold War and America’s new role as the leading superpower in the atomic age. era Historical Dictionary of the Roosevelt–Truman Era examines signifi cant individuals, organizations, and events in American political, economic, social, and cultural history between 1933 and 1953. The turbulent history of this period is told through the book’s chronology, introductory essay, bibliography, and hundreds of cross-referenced dictionary entries on key people, institutions, events, and other important terms. Neil a. wynn is professor of 20th-century American history at the University of Gloucestershire. HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF THE w roosevelt–truman w w era For orders and information please contact the publisher Scarecrow Press, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefi eld Publishing Group, Inc. COVER DESIGN by Allison Nealon 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200 Lanham, Maryland 20706 ISBN-13: 978-0-8108-5616-5 1-800-462-6420 • fax 717-794-3803 ISBN-10: 0-8108-5616-6 www.scarecrowpress.com 90000 COVER IMAGE: Franklin Delano Roosevelt (right) neil a.
    [Show full text]
  • The Environmental Legacy of World War II: Recovering CERCLA Costs from the U.S
    The Environmental By Stuart N. Roth, Erich P. Rapp, and Douglas A. Littlejohn Recovering CERCLA Costs from the U.S. Government ince its enactment by Congress in 1980, the Superfund statute has ushered in an era of envi- Sronmental legal warfare between the federal government and companies with cleanup costs that have escalated into the hundreds of millions of dollars.1 In some cases, the result has been the death or near-death of companies throughout America. If your company is paying these costs, then you may want to consider examining your company’s history and the country’s 42 ACCA Docket September 2003 Legacy of history as a strategy for making claims against another potentially responsible party (“PRP”): the U.S. government. Companies responding to claims by the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA”), the Superfund statute, may be able to seek contribution from the fed- eral government because of federal ownership or operation of industrial and manufacturing facilities and equipment during World War II.2 This step requires little more than researching your company and the government’s wartime records. Reprinted with permission of the author(s) and the American Corporate Counsel Association as originally appeared Stuart N. Roth, Erich P. Rapp, and Douglas A. Littlejohn, “The Environmental Legacy of World War II: Recovering CERCLA Costs from the U.S. Government,” ACCA Docket 21, no. 8 (September 2003): 42–59. Copyright © 2003 Stuart N. Roth, Erich P. Rapp, Douglas A. Littlejohn, and the American Corporate Counsel Association. All rights reserved.
    [Show full text]
  • The Founding Ol Me Institute of Meteorology at Llie University Of
    Horace R. Byers the founding ol me institute of Santa Barbara, Calif. 93108 Meteorology at llie University of Chicago' Abstract After the death in office of W. R. Gregg, it was recom- mended that Rossby be named Chief of the Bureau. An intimate glimpse into events at the start of the Institute But it did not seem wise for the Secretary of Agriculture, of Meteorology at the University of Chicago in 1940 is given from the viewpoint of the relatively primitive state of Amer- in whose Department the Bureau existed, to give the ican meteorology at the time. Personalities are discussed, office to a man who had just become naturalized as a with special emphasis on the powerful influence of Carl- United States citizen, so the position was offered to Gustaf Rossby from his desk as Assistant Chief of the U.S. Comdr. F. W. Reichelderfer of the U.S. Navy, and Weather Bureau and later as head of the fledgling institute. Rossby was made Assistant Chief for Research and Development. Rossby and Reichelderfer stepped up the in-service The Institute of Meteorology, later called the Depart- training programs that we had already started on a ment of Meteorology, was organized at the University modest scale, bringing in forecasters and others of of Chicago in the spring of 1940 to start with the subse- amazingly inadequate backgrounds to be taught funda- quent fall quarter. I can boast of being the initiator of mental meteorology and synoptic analysis. A program the development. But to understand how it came about, had been started to send a few highly qualified personnel it is necessary to go back a little to the late 1930s in to educational institutions.
    [Show full text]
  • President Truman and the Steel Seizure Case: a 50-Year Retrospective - Transcript of Proceedings
    Duquesne Law Review Volume 41 Number 4 President Truman and the Steel Article 6 Seizure Case: A Symposium 2003 President Truman and the Steel Seizure Case: A 50-Year Retrospective - Transcript of Proceedings Follow this and additional works at: https://dsc.duq.edu/dlr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation President Truman and the Steel Seizure Case: A 50-Year Retrospective - Transcript of Proceedings, 41 Duq. L. Rev. 685 (2003). Available at: https://dsc.duq.edu/dlr/vol41/iss4/6 This Front Matter is brought to you for free and open access by Duquesne Scholarship Collection. It has been accepted for inclusion in Duquesne Law Review by an authorized editor of Duquesne Scholarship Collection. President Truman and the Steel Seizure Case: A 50- Year Retrospective Transcript of Proceedings PRESENTED BY: DUQUESNE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW in cooperation with the TRUMAN PRESIDENTIAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2002 3:10 O'CLOCK PM DUQUESNE UNION BALLROOM DUQUESNE UNIVERSITY PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA Co-Sponsored by the Duquesne Law Review P-A-R-T-I-C-I-P-A-N-T-S: (In Order of Appearance) NICHOLAS P. CAFARDI, Dean, Duquesne University School of Law KEN GORMLEY, Professor, Duquesne University School of Law ROBERT F. KRAVETZ, Editor-In-Chief, Duquesne Law Review CHARLES J. DOUGHERTY, President, Duquesne University CLIFTON TRUMAN DANIEL, Grandson of President Truman MICHAEL DEVINE, Harry S. Truman Presidential Library P-A-N-E-L-I-S-T-S: MILTON KAYLE KEN HECHLER DAVID FELLER STANLEY TEMKO MAEVA MARCUS JOHN BARNETT P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N-G-S 685 686 Duquesne Law Review Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • The Life and Times of a Very Unusual Reindeer
    by Margaret Whisnant The Life and Times of a Very Unusual Reindeer Copyright © 2013 Margaret Whisnant All rights reserved by author. Permission to copy for single classroom use only. Electronic distribution limited to single classroom use only. Public display on electronic storage sites strictly prohibited. Copyright © 2013 Margaret Whisnant Taking Grades Publishing company Cover Image: clipart.com 1 Informational Text A Holiday Story and a Song Table of Contents Informational Text A Holiday Story and a Song. 1-2 Questions. 3-5 Answer Keys with CCSS Alignments. 6 Teacher’s Resources Making Media Comparisons (CCSS Activities Ideas) . 7-8 Research Ideas (CCSS Ideas). 8-9 Bibliography and e-Bibliography . .9 Copyright © 2013 Margaret Whisnant Taking Grades Publishing company 0 Informational Text A Holiday Story and a Song It’s Christmas 1949, and the song about his life is climbing to the #1 spot on the U.S. pop charts. Not too shabby for an eight-year-old with an unusual nose. Our juvenile celebrity got his start as the brain child of Robert L. May, who worked as a copywriter for the Montgomery Ward Company at their flagship store in Chicago. This huge retail and catalog giant had been buying and giving away children’s coloring books during the holiday season as a way to attract more shoppers to their outlet stores around the country. The practice was getting expensive, so the company president asked the marketing department to create an original story they could produce themselves and save money. On a January morning in 1939, May’s supervisor called him into his office.
    [Show full text]
  • 10’; 462 Grt, 443 Nrt
    Edgewater docked at Ford’s Rouge Plant for the first time 1931 [DC] departed the Great Lakes. EDGEWATER was sold in 1947 to Cleveland Tankers, Inc., Cleveland, OH, who converted her to a tanker at the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Co., Staten Island, NY and renamed her b) ORION before returning to Great Lakes service. New tonnage; 2463 GRT, 1826 NRT, 3,750 dwt. The ORION was laid up for the last time at Cleveland in December, 1957 before being sold to the Acme Iron & Metal Co., Ashtabula, OH in 1964 after she had laid idle for seven years. ORION arrived in tow at Ashtabula on September 15, 1964. Purchased by the Capital Dredge & Dock Corp., Lorain, OH, was cut down and converted to a 120 foot derrick barge from the forward section in 1965. The rear section was scrapped. The derrick barge sank near Lorain while under tow from Toledo, OH by the tug LAURENCE C. TURNER on July 23, 1968. Raised and pulled ashore by the Corps of Engineers the following month. Presumed scrapped at Lorain. Orion at Zug Island on the old Rouge River c1952 [DC] Orion during last year of operation on the St. Clair River 1957 [SM] 277HULL NUMBER Chester on the Erie Barge Canal [RN] Twin Screw Canal Bulk Freighter built at the River Rouge yard in 1931 as a) CHESTER (US.230959). Launched May 16, 1931 for the Ford Motor Co., Detroit MI. Dimensions: 300’loa-291’lbp-43’-20’; 1819 GRT, 1129 NRT, 2,000 dwt. Fully loaded, she would draw only ten feet.
    [Show full text]
  • Ssteinews Published Monthly by Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago
    Field sSteiNews Published Monthly by Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago Vol. 9 JANUARY, 1938 No. 1 NEW EXHIBIT SHOWS PREHISTORIC BIRDS RESTORED AS THEY APPEARED IN LIFE By Rudyerd Boulton the requirements of "missing links" per- feet long, resembling a gigantic loon, was Curator of Birds fectly. They are halfway between reptiles flightless but more perfectly adapted for Present-day birds show in great detail and birds, but by reason of possessing life in the water than any other known bird, the adaptations and specializations that feathers (the only definitive character that probably even more so than a penguin. have produced the 27,000-odd distinct kinds separates birds from all other living crea- Diatryma and Phororhacos were large, that are Ijnown now to inhabit the earth. tures) they are called birds. flightless, predatory, crane-like birds that The relationships of the various living groups Archaeornis had well developed teeth, lived, respectively, in Wyoming during the could not be well determined without the free moving undifferentiated fingers at the Eocene period (50,000,000 years ago) and evidence afforded by fossilized skeletons of bend of the wing, and a long jointed lizard- in Argentina during the Miocene (about birds long extinct. For this reason fossil like tail with a pair of stiff feathers arising 10,000,000 or 12,000,000 years ago). Dia- birds present a field that is most tantalizing from each caudal vertebra. It had well tryma was a formidable creature about to the ornithologist. seven feet tall and While perfectly pre- more powerfully built served and complete than an ostrich.
    [Show full text]
  • The Genesis of Meteorology at the University of Chicago
    The Genesis of Meteorology at the University of Chicago Douglas R. Allen Department of the Geophysical Sciences, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois ABSTRACT The genesis of meteorology at the University of Chicago is reviewed in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Institute of Meteorology. The Institute of Meteorology was founded in October 1940 under the leadership of Carl Rossby and Horace Byers. Although previous attempts failed due to lack of resources, the imminent need for me- teorologists in aviation and long-range weather forecasting, particularly for the nation's military needs, provided sufficient motivation for the program, and a $15,000 donation by Sewell Avery provided the necessary funds to get the program started. This article adds to Byers' 1975 account of the founding of the Institute by documenting the exchange of letters in 1939 between C. Rossby, Karl T. Compton (president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Arthur H. Compton (pro- fessor of Physics at Chicago), and Henry Gale (dean of Physical Sciences at Chicago) regarding the possibility of estab- lishing a meteorology program at Chicago. 1 • Early efforts to establish in the late 1930s the forward-looking Swedish meteo- meteorology at Chicago rologist, Carl Rossby, resurrected the idea of starting a meteorology program at Chicago. The Institute of Meteorology at the University of Chicago (which became the Department of Meteorol- ogy in 1943) was founded in October 1940, largely 2. Rossby's vision and Chicago's initial through the efforts of Carl-Gustaf A. Rossby and response Horace R. Byers. Several previous attempts had been made to start a meteorology program at Chicago In 1926 Rossby came to the United States on a fel- (Koelsch 1996).
    [Show full text]
  • Learning by Doing in Markets, Firms, and Countries
    This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research Volume Title: Learning by Doing in Markets, Firms, and Countries Volume Author/Editor: Naomi R. Lamoreaux, Daniel M. G. Raff and Peter Temin, editors Volume Publisher: University of Chicago Press Volume ISBN: 0-226-46832-1 Volume URL: http://www.nber.org/books/lamo99-1 Publication Date: January 1999 Chapter Title: Sears, Roebuck in the Twentieth Century: Competition, Complementarities, and the Problem of Wasting Assets Chapter Author: Daniel Raff, Peter Temin Chapter URL: http://www.nber.org/chapters/c10234 Chapter pages in book: (p. 219 - 252) 6 Sears, Roebuck in the Twentieth Century: Competition, Complementarities, and the Problem of Wasting Assets Daniel M. G. Raff and Peter Temin 6.1 Introduction The American frontier closed around 1890. This assertion in its obvious meaning-that there was no unsettled land-is not true: much land waited to be settled in 1890. But after 1890 there was no place where settlers were beyond easy contact with the rest of society. By 1890 the railroad reached throughout the country. Mail, newspapers, periodicals, and publications of all sorts could travel by post and reach everyone quickly. These conditions created an opportunity for the successors to the peddlers who in earlier years had carried or carted their wares to the otherwise isolated. Previously, relatively large retailers-however small their volumes may have been in absolute terms-sold only in cities and towns. But in 1890 the coun- try's population was still two-thirds rural. Now mass retailers could use the mails to sell goods where people lived (Chandler 1977).
    [Show full text]
  • Chicago, of Which I Have the Honor to Be President, Has Had the Pleasure of Entertaining a Number of the Nation’S Outstanding Men
    C h i c a g o a n d Northwestern R a i l w a y C o m p a n y O f f i c e o f P r e s i d e n t C h i c a g o February 13, 1936. Dear Mr. Szymczais;: The Economic Club of Chicago, of which I have the honor to be President, has had the pleasure of entertaining a number of the nation’s outstanding men. The Club now would like to enjoy tne privilege of a visit from the Honorable 1»1. S. Eccles. On several occasions the Club has acquainted iir. Eccles with its desire to hear from him at a time convenient to him. I am wondering if you would be good enough to remind Mr. Eccles that our invitation still stands, and that we would particularly appreciate7 an opportunity to hear from him at our March or April / / dinner. < ■ ■— « — • Governor Schaller is a member of the Economic Club, as are most of the leading business men in the City, The organization, however, is especially noted for the young men in its membership. Distinguished gentlemen liK@ Dr. Butler, Newton Baker and Walter Lippmann nave said to me that nowhere in their experience have they ever faced a more inspiring audience than that provided by the Economic Club. The attached leaflet will tell you in detail some of the obiects of the organization and will acquaint you with its officers and directorate. I believe Mr. Eccles will remember Governor Schaller and Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • X2671 Centennial Poster 1
    THE f irst DECADE 1902-1911 B. W. McCausland, first president of United States Gypsum Company 1902-1904 The quarry crew of the Alabaster, Michigan mine 1903 “We know what we are doing, and we do it right.” THE RED BOOK FOR BUILDERS AND PLASTERERS 1905 EDITION South Chicago plaster plant’s watchdog, “Prince,” was also a company product logo CIRCA. 1908 Six ships of the Gypsum Royal Fleet transported raw “rock” Pyrobar, a fireproof building from Nova Scotia to the U.S. block invented at the company in 1903 RESPONSIBILITY RESPONSIBILITY MEANS LIVING UP TO YOUR PROMISES. That includes promises to customers, employees, shareholders, the industry and the community. United States Gypsum Company was founded in 1902 to: –Provide customers with better, safer building products. – Give employees opportunity and keep them safe. – Earn money for shareholders. – Serve a broader market of builders with economies of scale. For a century, this company has worked hard to honor our basic responsibilities. Our future success holds much promise, as it is built on a rock solid foundation. X2671A/2-02 © 2002, USG Corporation Printed in U.S.A. THE second DECADE 1912-1921 The Oakfield, NY plant was among the first three to manufacture Sackett board, precursor to SHEETROCK. Integrity is the cornerstone of our business… because how we work is based on trust. INTEGRITY MEANS ALWAYS BEING HONEST AND STRAIGHTFORWARD IN EVERY ASPECT OF OUR BUSINESS, from our business dealings to our products. Long-time CEO Sewell Avery said of our early salespeople, “These traveling representatives of our company have been selected and trained with careful regard to their integrity.” The U.S.
    [Show full text]