America
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Page : 848 pages
File Size : 13,18 MB
Release : 1926
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Page : 848 pages
File Size : 13,18 MB
Release : 1926
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Author : United States. Office of Education
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Page : 872 pages
File Size : 38,13 MB
Release : 1932
Category : Education
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Author : Bp. Francis Clement Kelley
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Page : 580 pages
File Size : 12,44 MB
Release : 1909
Category : Missions
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Page : 1572 pages
File Size : 30,68 MB
Release : 1920
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Author : Georgina Pell Curtis
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Page : 518 pages
File Size : 34,12 MB
Release : 1910
Category : Biography
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Page : 336 pages
File Size : 48,61 MB
Release : 1916
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1867/68- include the Statistical report of the Secretary of State in continuation of the Annual report of the Commissioners of Statistics.
Author : David Farber
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 376 pages
File Size : 48,30 MB
Release : 2013-04-18
Category : History
ISBN : 0199911622
Today, consumer credit, employee stock options, and citizen investment in the stock market are taken for granted--fundamental facts of American economic life. But few people realize that they were first widely promoted by John Jakob Raskob (1879-1950), the innovative financier and self-made businessman who built the Empire State building, made millions for DuPont and General Motors, and helped shape the contours of modern capitalism. David Farber's Everybody Ought to Be Rich is the first biography of Raskob, a man who shunned the limelight (he was the anti-Trump of his time) but whose impact on free market enterprise can hardly be overstated. A colorful figure, Raskob's life evokes the roaring twenties, the Catholic elite, the boardrooms of America's biggest corporations, and the rags-to-riches tale that is central to the American dream. Farber follows Raskob's remarkable trajectory from a teenage candy seller on the railway between Lockport and Buffalo to the pinnacles of wealth and power. With no formal education but possessed of a boundless energy and an unshakeable faith in individual initiative (his motto was "Go ahead and do something!"), Raskob partnered with great industrialists and financiers, buying up companies, leveraging investments, reorganizing corporations, funneling money into the political system, and creating new pools of credit for rich investors and middle class consumers alike--practices commonplace today but revolutionary at the time. His most famous innovation was mass consumer credit, which he offered to individual car buyers, enabling working and middle-class Americans to purchase GM's more expensive cars. Raskob desperately wanted to bridge class divides and to share the wealth American corporations were fast creating--so that everyone could be rich. Chronicling Raskob's short-comings as well as his successes, Everybody Ought to Be Rich illuminates a crucial but little-known figure in American capitalism whose influence can still be felt today.
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Page : 520 pages
File Size : 29,18 MB
Release : 1936
Category : Church music
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Page : 24 pages
File Size : 37,71 MB
Release : 1972
Category : Older people
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Page : 694 pages
File Size : 35,57 MB
Release : 1922
Category : Church music
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