Word: evening
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Even in the age of declining Supreme Court prestige, the appointment had its note of irony. In Franklin Roosevelt's vain but tumultuous campaign to pack the nation's highest court with added New Dealing justices, no man raised a louder voice for the White House enterprise than burly, boot-jawed "Shay" Minton. As a result of his signal service, he had been mentioned for just about every vacancy on the court that turned up in the past decade. But until Harry Truman broke the news last week, his name had hardly entered the speculation this time. Battle...
This unprecedented procedure set off a series of scandals which startled even the most resigned of Philadelphians. The head of the amusement-tax division hanged himself. A water-department official slashed his wrists with a razor blade (he had been taking bribes for jamming the mechanism of city meters and handing out free water to those who paid off). One official was cited for impeachment and 16 were indicted by a grand jury...
...least embarrassed by these revelations, Mike set out to demonstrate his zeal for law enforcement, began raiding gambling joints, breaking up slot machines and punchboards. He even raided a law enforcement officers' club called the "Footprinters" and fired one of his deputies, one Ard Pratt (a nephew of the former sheriff), for being there. But Mike soon took Ard back and became so pally with him that the two became known as Ard and Lard. He also lost his zeal for knocking over slot machines...
After a down-to-the-hearthside preamble explaining Britain's economic plight, Sir Stafford came to the sensational core of his message: Britain was devaluing the pound from $4.03 to $2.80. Even to those experts who were dead sure that devaluation was coming, the size of the cut (31%) was breathtaking...
Freer Trade? All the dislocation and hullabaloo would be amply balanced if devaluation accomplished its immediate purpose: a breathing spell for Britain. Beyond that lay an even more important goal: freeing trade from phony exchange rates. The $4.03 pound was phony because a pound would not buy in Britain as much as $4.03 would...