Word: murchison
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...years the studious New York Times failed to acknowledge that the Japanese import menace, about which William Randolph ("Buy American") Hearst seemed perennially overexcited, might actually materialize. One of the first alarms sufficiently well expressed to convince laymen was written for the Times last August by President Claudius Temple Murchison of the Cotton-Textile Institute. Last week President Murchison arrived in New York from San Francisco, marched modestly into the Hotel McAlpin to tell a gathering of U. S. textile men how an excellent formulation of their problem had led to a solution both surprising and superb. In Osaka...
...could have been so happily qualified to do something about Cotton's prospect as was Claudius T. Murchison when he succeeded George Sloan as president of the Cotton-Textile Institute in November 1935. North Carolina-born, he understood King Cotton as only a Southerner can, knew well that the U. S. sells more raw cotton to Japan than to any country in the world. After teaching economics for 13 years at the University of North Carolina, he was appointed director of the Bureau of Foreign & Domestic Commerce by President Roosevelt in 1934. He sat in with State Department officials...
Nonetheless the amenities had to be preserved. Not knowing quite whether he was the Governor of Edward VIII or George VI, Sir Murchison Fletcher donned his black & gold uniform, his cocked hat with white feathers and had himself ferried out to U. S. S. Indianapolis. If Sir Murchison's stout British heart suffered any anxiety that Franklin Roosevelt might greet him with the same sort of bunny hug lately practiced on President Gabriel Terra of Uruguay (see cut) and other non-British notables, his fears were quickly dissipated. The President shook hands at arm's length, charmed...
...When Sir Murchison had departed, within a few minutes President Roosevelt followed him, went ashore in the local steamer Tobago, drove out to Government House. There after a few swizzles of excellent Trinidad rum, they shook their heads in private over Mrs. Simpson's triumph, ate a highly seasoned luncheon, motored for 25 miles through the countryside before the Indianapolis was ready to sail...
...succeed Dr. Willard L. Thorp, efficient head of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce who resigned because a Democratic Senate committee refused to approve the appointment of a onetime Republican (TIME, May 21), President Roosevelt last week named another professor of economics: Dr. Claudius T. Murchison of the University of North Carolina...