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...Richard Aldrich, New York socialite, was introduced as "a woman of leisure." Said she: "The contention of the wet and noisy minority is only the voicing of self-indulgence. ... Its arguments appear very childish. . . . The statement that Prohibition has worked no changes in railroad discipline is quite childish. . . . The wet minority of leisure, occupied in establishing social bootlegging, is now alarmed lest the lives of its illegal employes be in danger. Hosts and hostesses have only to be less childish and there will be an end to the strange alliance between liquor and ladies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Dry Rebuttals | 3/24/1930 | See Source »

...first only gossip, the deal seemed a certainty when Winthrop Williams Aldrich, president of Equitable Trust Co., was seen in the office of Albert Henry Wiggin, chairman of Chase National Bank, and when no denials were issued. A combination of these two banks would create an institution with resources of $2,728,800,000 exclusive of securities affiliates, making the new bank the biggest in the world. On Dec. 31 the ranking of large banks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: World's Largest | 3/17/1930 | See Source »

Equitable. In 1871 Traders Deposit Co. was begun with a $16,000 capital. In 1902, Equitable Trust Co. with capital of $1,000,000 was chartered to succeed Traders Deposit Co. Although Equitable has long been known as a Rockefeller bank, this was forcefully brought out when Winthrop Williams Aldrich was elected its president (TIME, Dec. 30). Before this, Banker Aldrich, a Rockefeller-in-law, had been connected with the bank as its counsel and had received further Rockefeller business when he handled the ousting of Standard Oil of Indiana's famed Robert Wright Stewart. Upon his Equitable election...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: World's Largest | 3/17/1930 | See Source »

...Hallowell '32, B. E. Estes '32, and R. C. Aldrich '31 were the three Crimson runners in the mile, with Huckins of Dartmouth, and Hendricks and Martin of Cornell. Martin took the lead and tried in a vain attempt to draw the Crimson and Green runners out, but merely burned himself out. At the end of the eighth lap Hallowell went into the lead and was never again headed, finishing a good 20 yards in the lead. The real contest was between Estes and Hutchins, with the Crimson man after fighting his way into the lead on the last...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Piles Up 63 1-2 Points To Crush Cornell and Big Green | 2/25/1930 | See Source »

Score--Worcester 42, Harvard 1933 30. Goals--Edwards 5, Edstrom 9, Conothan 4, Schroeder 3, Matursevitch Kimbrough 3, Hageman 4, Fouls--Edwards, Edstrom 3, Duggan 2, Kimbrough, Huppuch. Referee--Aldrich. Time--Two 20-minute periods...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 1933 QUINTET LOSES CLOSE ONE TO WORCESTER 42-30 | 2/20/1930 | See Source »

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