Difference between revisions of "Raymond Moley"

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(New page: {{wp-also}} '''Raymond Moley''' PhD '18 was a professor of political science at Barnard, joining the faculty there in 1923. He assisted [[Franklin Delano Roosevel...)
 
 
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'''Raymond Moley''' [[PhD]] '[[1918|18]] was a professor of [[political science]] at [[Barnard]], joining the faculty there in [[1923]]. He assisted [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] with his presidential election campaign and later became part of that president's influential [[Brain Trust]], helping to recruit other Columbia-affiliated professors to the cause. He took credit for naming the "New Deal" and for "saving capitalism," but later broke with FDR, became a rabid conservative, and criticized the president's policies.  
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'''Raymond Moley''' [[PhD]] '[[1918|18]] was a professor of [[PoliSci|political science]] at [[Barnard College|Barnard]], joining the faculty there in [[1923]]. He assisted [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] with his presidential election campaign and later became part of that president's influential [[Brain Trust]], helping to recruit other Columbia-affiliated professors to the cause. He took credit for naming the "New Deal" and for "saving capitalism," but later broke with FDR, became a rabid conservative, and criticized the president's policies.  
  
 
[[Category:Former professors|Moley, Raymond]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Moley, Raymond]]
 
[[Category:GSAS alumni|Moley, Raymond]]
 
[[Category:GSAS alumni|Moley, Raymond]]
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[[Category:Political science professors|Moley, Raymond]]

Latest revision as of 16:02, 24 May 2013

See also Wikipedia's article about "Raymond Moley".

Raymond Moley PhD '18 was a professor of political science at Barnard, joining the faculty there in 1923. He assisted Franklin Delano Roosevelt with his presidential election campaign and later became part of that president's influential Brain Trust, helping to recruit other Columbia-affiliated professors to the cause. He took credit for naming the "New Deal" and for "saving capitalism," but later broke with FDR, became a rabid conservative, and criticized the president's policies.