Word: free
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...important political campaign Franklin Roosevelt had not appeared before the public save in his full magisterial dignity as President of the U. S. In that non-partisan role he lost little if any campaigning advantage. Although he could not directly attack his political opponent, he could draw audiences, obtain free radio time, effectively expound his own political doctrines not as though seeking power but with the noble air of using his power for the public good. So well were some of his advisers satisfied with this form of campaigning-including, last week, his deft anticipation of Alf Landon...
...station to give the GOP Nominee the cold stare. Reception grew warmer as the procession reached the business section. Opposite the Nominee's hotel a small boy appeared carrying a Roosevelt placard. Several spectators grabbed for it. The urchin slipped behind a policeman, jeered: "It's a free country...
...Frederick) in whose house she lived, had brought her up like a white girl and she was loved by the Senora's son Phillipe (Kent Taylor). However, she was glad when she found out that her father's wife had been a squaw because it left her free to marry Alesandro (Don Ameche, late of NBC's Grand Hotel hour). They had a happy life until white usurpers put them oft the land they farmed. Trekking in the rain to new lands, their baby be came ill. Alesandro stole a horse to fetch the medicine that might...
...York University, the nation's biggest (enrollment: 42,850), Chancellor Harry Woodburn Chase assured freshmen that "in America youth is still reasonably free and can look forward to some measure of opportunity...
...Sept. 28). It was not a campaign to drum up business for its members, not even an institutional campaign. In modest little two-column insertions in dailies in the Northeast it was announced that a booklet called The New York Stock Exchange, Its Functions and Operations would be sent free upon request. In the New York Times and Herald Tribune the Exchange got preferred positions on the second or third pages along with the Fifth Avenue Hotel, Knox Hats, Reuben's and the Brass Rail restaurants...