Word: fricks
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...cause a sensation took the new and unpredictable form of a visit to Belleville, Ill. where he addressed the Presbyterian Men's Club. Next day the Belleville Daily Advocate reported that in the course of his speech Pitcher Dean had called the National League's President Ford Frick and its Umpire George Barr "the two biggest crooks in baseball." Last week, when the Cardinals went to New York to play the Brooklyn Dodgers, Pitcher Dean was notified that he had been indefinitely suspended by President Frick, would not be reinstated until he signed a letter of apology, retraction...
...President Frick's purpose in chastising Pitcher Dean was to deflate his ego, he failed sadly. Instead there followed an absurd uproar which filled U. S. sports pages for three days while Pitcher Dean reiterated: "I'm not goin' to sign nothin'!" Baseball's noisiest dispute since Babe Ruth was fined $5,000 for insubordination in 1925, the Dean-Frick fight ended after three days in a ludicrously solemn compromise. Witnessed by two dozen newshawks, President Frick asked Pitcher Dean whether he had made the remarks attributed to him by the Belleville Advocate...
Predecessor and unconscious mentor of most of the 19th-Century industrial titans, Mr. Rockefeller outlived them all. Hill. Harriman, Morgan, Frick, Carnegie carved their careers in the middle Rockefeller years. Mr. Rockefeller never heard of Henry Ford until his late 60s. The great group of Rockefeller partners and executives-Flagler, Rogers, Andrews, Brewster, Pratt, Archbold, Bedford, Moffett- has been gone for years.* But at no time by either word or gesture did Rockefeller ever indicate any regret for anything he ever did. Apparently there was a sharp and impenetrable wall between his conceptions of business and private morality...
Almost a duplicate of the already opened Frick Museum in purpose, the Bache Museum too will preserve the collection of a very rich man in the rooms and in the setting that he chose for it. There are certain minor differences. It took the forceful daughter of Henry Clay Frick. her trustees and architects, four years to remodel her father's home as a public museum. For many years Banker Bache kept his great collection in a large Manhattan apartment, bought his present house in 1925 with the idea of turning it into a museum...
Chester Dale Collection. Unlike the Frick and Bache collections, the great collection of French moderns assembled by knowing, tawny-haired Mrs. Chester Dale is not yet a public museum, but visitors are welcome within reason...