Abstrakt: |
Focuses on the views of Robert Isham Randolph, member of the United States Republican Party and a consulting engineer, on the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) Act. Comment of Randolph regarding the act being a political and economic crime; Views that David Lilienthal and Harcourt Morgan, directors of the board, prevented Arthur Morgan, another director of the board, to single handedly pursue the direction of TVA; Division of responsibilities of the directors; Charges of falsehood and misrepresentation made by Morgan; Clauses in the literature of the act to contest TVA's right to sell power; Opinion that power is the mainstay of the act with flood control, national defense and fertilizer being the peripherals; Question against TVA regarding utilization of dams to hold water before flood for generate power or used for preventing flood. |