Word: burtonizing
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...Geoffrey D. Bush '50, of Cambridge; Robert P. Davis '47, of Dorchester, Mass; Burton S. Dreben '50; Abraham Klein of Cambridge; James A. Kritzeck of Saint Cloud, Minn.; Gordon J. F. MacDonald '50, of Cambridge; Paul C. Mangelsdorf, Jr. of Cambridge; George C. Soulis of Athens, Greece; and William H. Telfer of Portland, Oregon...
...Senator. Three days before election, the former chairman of the Liquor Commission, a Payne appointee, was indicted. More important was the fact that the party was splintered by factional disputes, including the bitter primary campaign in which Payne defeated Senator Owen Brewster. The Republican nominee for governor, State Senator Burton M. Cross, had three opponents-two disgruntled Republicans running as independents and an ex-Republican running as a Democrat...
...affair was nevertheless alarming: it suggested that a high government official with access to the classified treaty had given the information to the Reds. In Parliament later, Australia's foreign minister, Richard Casey, admitted the leak. (Although Casey denied the connection, members' questions pointed to one John Burton, a former top official under Casey's Laborite predecessor, Herbert V. Evatt. Burton last spring led a delegation of fellow travelers to Red China's "Pacific Peace Conference...
Seventeen members of last year's first year class have accepted election to the Legal Aid Bureau. They are Harris Aron, Richard J. Barnet, Burton Bromson, William J. Chadwick, H. Stewart Dunn, Jr., Laurence S. Fordham, B. Harrison Frankel, Donald F. French, Lawrence R. Fullem, James T. Harris, Herbert D. Katz, Jonathan W. Lubell, Ramon L. Posel, Leo Silverstein, Richard W. Southgate, Julian L. Weber, George P. Zisdenstein...
...listened to it on the radio. TIME reported in its issue of June 23, 1924 that a new loudspeaker had been installed on the White House radio set, said: "The President left the executive offices to go to his study to hear the nominating speech of Dr. Marion LeRoy Burton. At luncheon, he and Mrs. Coolidge heard the news of the nomination. He said nothing, but afterwards he went for a walk...