Word: altered
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Johnson was well launched in print on the series of articles he started to write for the Saturday Evening Post the moment President Roosevelt accepted his resignation as NRAdministrator. In an impatient opening salvo last fortnight the redoubtable General raked the whole New Deal front, advising President Roosevelt to alter or reverse his fiscal, monetary, tax, labor, industrial, relief, agricultural, foreign trade and recovery policies. "I firmly believe" wrote he, "that, if steps were taken tomorrow to put the monetary and borrowing policy of the Federal Government beyond the shadow of doubt, this depression would be relegated to the limbo...
...Scandinavian 2 Sever 35 Semitic 17a Sever 35 Spanish 4 hf. Sever 35 2 P.M. Fine Arts 3a Van Rensselaer Rm. Geology 1 Adelsheim--Remick Memorial Hall Reppun--Zurkow New Lecture Hall TUESDAY, JANUARY 29 (XIII) Astronomy 3 Astron. Lab. Biology 115 Harvard 6 Chemistry B Mallinckrodt MB9, MB23 Alter--Schmidt Mallinckrodt MB9 Schnur--Zimmerman Mallinckrodt MB23 Chemistry 6 Geological Lect. Rm. Chinese 2 Boylston 25 Class. Archaeology 1a Sever 24 Comp. Literature 19 Sever 30, 35, 36 Adelman--Finer Sever 30 Floyd--Miller Sever 35 Morgan--Wylie Sever 36 Economics 4a Emerson D, 211 Ackerman--Porter Emerson D Prins...
...Here you have a bond issued by the United States Government, issued in a time of war and in the exercise of its war powers, a bond which the Government promised to pay in a certain kind of money. Where do you find any power under the Constitution to alter that bond, or the power of Congress to change that promise...
...present make-up of the Supreme Court as fortunate, for today, when the U. S. is swayed by a politically powerful liberal movement, the Court is dominated neither by conservatives who would block all attempts at change, nor by liberals who would put no check on hasty attempts to alter the face of government. Yet this well-balanced court is in a tight spot. A majority may believe that it would be less serious for the U. S. to face the economic upset caused by upholding the gold clauses than to establish a precedent that may in future make...
...were rudely shocked when he was accused of ulterior motives. But the overwhelming majority came and went in firm opposition to his principles and methods. Talks by Hearst-writers Richard Washburn Child and Bainbridge Colby and indirect offers to become wavers of the Hearst banner did surprisingly little to alter their opinion. Drop in the bucket though it may have been, the money which rolled from the Hearstian coffers to smooth the surface can be written in the ledger with red ink. Mr. Hearst, it would seem, is pinning too much faith in human stupidity. The Daily Princetonian...