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...team for two years. He hasn't been able to get much of a line on his candidates because lack of ice has hampered Dartmouth's practice. But he will have Sullivan returning, Marl Cross, a veteran defense man who has been shifted to forward, and Fred Maloon and Pete Keir, a Junior, also counted on. Bob Campbell and Ed Hughes, both Juniors, currently form the defense duo. Dartmouth, in its two years under Jeremiah, has won the Quadrangular League title twice, each time by winning all six of its games...
...Mike Niedorf, claims that this is bunk, that if and when Shaw forms a new band he will be delivered otherwise not . . . Columbia expects to release soon a piano album of eight sides with one side apiece by Jesse Stacy, Clarence Profit, Mary Lon Williams, Count Basic, Jimmy Johnson, Pete Johnson, and others. This reviewer heard several test pressings and if all the rest are as good the album will be really colossal. . . . Raymond Scott has been doing very well with a little ditty entitled "In An Eighteenth Century Drawing Room," swiped from one of the earlier efforts...
...income tax evasion (but forced to settle a Government lien for $1,384,222, taxes and penalties), who is now board chairman of Blyth & Co., Inc. It had also heard Morgan Partner George Whitney, Detroiter Emmett Francis ("Spike") Connely, president of Investment Bankers Association. Young (31), brash SEC Counsel Pete Nehemkis pitched them questions to which they gave defensive answers...
Well did Harold Stanley know when he sat down in the witness chair that soon he would be back in the same chair when the committee shifted its topic from "Investment banking" to allied "competitive bidding." Well did Pete Nehemkis know that Mr. Stanley was the leader of the conservative Wall Street group (including such firms as Kuhn, Loeb, Lee Higginson, First Boston) which has frigidly rejected competition. When such competition-minded houses as Chicago's Halsey, Stuart, such individuals as Cleveland's Cyrus ("The Great") Eaton, walk in the front door with bids for securities issues, Morgan...
Last week, as Pete Nehemkis tried (unsuccessfully) to get Mr. Stanley to admit that his firm, managing underwriter for A. T. & T., had parceled out its financing ($580,000,000 since 1935) to a select and fixed group, SEC's quizzer carefully avoided reference to competitive bidding. A question by TNEC Chairman O'Mahoney gave Harold Stanley the opening he was waiting for. With the air of a man starting a lecture, Mr. Stanley sounded off: ". . . The question of competitive bidding is a subject which I would like to go into and talk about at length...