Word: crediteer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...simply cannot afford to be a resident of California as well as New York. . . . Perhaps I am honored by special attention in the taxation program of the Federal Government on account of my political attitude, but I do not think so. I believe the Government should be given due credit for robbing everybody with the utmost impartiality. . . . The methods of the tax collector are largely those of the gangster and gunman. You cannot argue with the tax collector any more than with any other racketeer. The Treasury Department holds a gun to your head and you either come across...
...police, however, are willing to give all the credit for this hasty arrest to Colonel Charles R. Apted '08. While the Colonel refuses to make a direct contradiction, he says that the accurate story will come out in court...
Seventeen games drew 500.000 people. The biggest crowd (61,000) saw what was probably the best game-Yale 7, Navy 6-in the Yale Bowl. For the Yale victory, after four periods of smashing, bruising football, credit went to Substitute Henry Gardner. He trotted onto the field in the first quarter, trotted off a few seconds later, after place-kicking the extra point following Yale's touchdown...
Madeleine Renaud, member of the Comédie Franç, whose performance in Maria Chapdelaine (TIME, Oct. 7) brought her to the attention of U. S. cinemaddicts, was responsible for the sensible suggestion that the adults in La Maternelle should wear no makeup. Otherwise, credit for dialog, direction and, to a large extent, photography goes to Jean Benoit-Lévy, who adapted the picture from Léon Frapié's novel. Son of a toy manufacturer, bespectacled, 47, Director Benoit-Lévy, whose Itto, dealing with Moroccan revolution, is the current cinema sensation in France, selected...
...Benny's wife, Mary Livingstone, feeds him his gags. He gives much of the credit for his success to Harry Conn who writes his routines-impromptu vaudeville with the affectation of a plot. In cinema, Benny played a half dozen pictures before Broadway Melody of 1936 made him a star...