Word: bulkleys
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...precisely noon on Dec. 1, Vice President Curtis mounted the rostrum in the Senate chamber at Washington. Beneath him Senators were milling about, handshaking, ready after five months of vacation to take up the Nation's business again. All the Senators-elect (Hastings, Bulkley, McGill, Brock, Carey, Williamson) except James John Davis and Dwight Whitney Morrow were being introduced right & left by friends. Mr. Davis' right to his seat had been challenged by Senator Nye's committee for investigating excessive campaign expenditures. He refused to join the Senate until cleared. Mr. Morrow's credentials were late...
...zeal as did Charles Dawes's Col. Ed Clifford. He should be a man of some distinction in his own right; often he will come to the aspirant of his own accord after the season is well advanced. In not having obeyed Rule i Ohio's Bulkley (to continue with him as a handy specimen) is not yet at any disadvantage since his fellow Harvard man, Governor Roosevelt of New York, and that Johns Hopkins bachelor, four-time Governor Ritchie of Maryland, have neither of them found their greatest & best friends vet, and Owen D. Young will require...
...entrenched leaders, rather than the party executives of the moment. Some Democratic leaders who will control important blocks of delegates (outside of New York) in 1932 are Executive Committee Chairman Jouett Shouse, Senators Robinson of Arkansas, Harrison of Mississippi, Walsh of Massachusetts, Glass of Virginia (whom Ohio's Bulkley already knows well, having helped him write the Federal Reserve Act in the 63rd Congress) and Senator-elect Lewis of Illinois. Some Republicans who must not be overlooked are Ralph Williams of Oregon, "Tieless Joe" Tolbert of South Carolina. Perry Howard of Mississippi, Virginia's Bascom Slemp...
...empted the Unemployment subhead in the Senate for the time being but might be persuaded to share it with the right Democrat. His friend Governor Roosevelt has spoken for Unemployment Insurance and is also known as quite a Water Power man, on the government-control side. Newcomers like Bulkley and Morrow must, upon reaching the Senate sounding-board, sound off loudly and repeatedly on their chosen theme-but never too specifically. The tariff should be attempted only by acknowledged economic experts. Prohibition is a theme best left alone, though Democrats are now-Wet by definition and Republicans should strive...
Ohio's Bulkley having been taken as a timely specimen, and also because of all mentionable specimens he is the least known, it is only fair to describe...