Word: balderston
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Reserve's discount-rate rise. The hearings changed no one's mind or position one iota, but they produced some clarification of the events that led up to the rate rise and considerably heightened speculation about President Johnson's choice to replace Vice Chairman C. Canby Balderston, the retiring member of the Federal Reserve's 4 to 3 conservative majority...
Horrified Rumor. Thus, Wall Street was suitably horrified last week as rumors swept the Street that Balderston's replacement might be none other than Galbraith. If the President nominates an easy-money advocate, the Board's one-vote margin for higher interest rates would disappear and Bill Martin might resign. Johnson has reportedly rejected three men for Balderston's chair, has not yet made up his mind. The business community particularly opposes the appointment of another man like Sherman Maisel, an easy-money man and a former University of California economics professor named to the board...
...sort of writer who needs a writer. When he leaned on Bernard Shaw, he produced the book for the musical masterpiece My Fair Lady With the late T. H. White to guide his pen, he wrote the passable Camelot. His unseen ally this time is John L. Balderston, who wrote Berkeley Square in 1929, and Balderston was apparently not meant for the ages...
...Grace A. Gregory '66, for a paper "The Origin and Formation of Meteorites," Elisabeth L. Hackner '65, for a poem "Beaufort, 1898," and Anne Hebald '66, for a paper "The Sun, Line and Cave Allegories in the Republic of Plato: A Cyclical Theory." Honorable mentions went to Caroline G. Balderston '66 and L. Ann Cameron...
Caroline G. Balderston '66 urged that RGA pass a resolution protesting a Mississippi bill to revoke the charter of Tougaloo, a predominantly Negro college long active in civil rights. "Integration is a moral, not a political, issue," she said...