Word: accepter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Washroom,'' under Political Notes, p. 16, issue of Sept. 11. If the incident, the details of TIME so skilfully presents, opens the gate to that long-desired path through which Huey is to be permanently shunted into a one-way blind of alley, I shall accept it as convincing evidence of "Wonderous Ways." GEORGE B. LAUDER Sanbornton, N. H. To Mr. Rand & TIME Sirs: To able Mr. Rand and interesting TIME, praise. ''The March of TIME" brings to me the most exciting half-hour of radio entertainment so my radio set is getting an overhauling...
...sponsoring of "The March of TIME" will prove another achievement of the list now to your credit, and I am sure that a vast radio audience will ever feel grateful to you and to TIME for the instructive pleasure in store for them. . . . CLARENCE A. BARNES Mexico, Mo. Kindly accept my thanks for again inaugurating "The March of TIME." I think this program deserves a place in our American history. If this program could be recorded and released many years from now, when the men and things we now take for granted will be history, it would give our posterity...
...little farm at Brissac. To one thing he could never grow accustomed. Spending all his life in the company of wealthy and generous sports- men, the closefisted money grubbing of French peasants infuriated him. It was his boast that there was no indignity that a French peasant would not accept for $100. Dying, he proceeded to prove...
Addressing him as "Dear Raymond," the President replied: "It is with a sense of deep personal regret that I accept your resignation. . . . You have rendered a very definite service to your country. . . . The ending of our official relations will in no way terminate our close personal association. . . . Every good wish and my affectionate regards...
...General" Farley used about the same oblique strategy when week before he got Madam Secretary of Labor Perkins to accept American Federation of Labor's Edward Francis McGrady as her No. 1 assistant. When Miss Perkins was appointed, the A. F. of L. was outraged because she had no union card. Jim Farley tried to smooth the A. F. of L. down by putting Mr. McGrady into the sub-Cabinet. But Madam Secretary Perkins, no politician, balked, refused to have him or any other Farley candidate. Months passed during which she met Mr. McGrady repeatedly at NRA headquarters where...