Word: hezekiah
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...Norman Hezekiah Davis (in absentia) LL.D...
...Government control it better than the French or Ger- man Governments had done? All these things occurring 4,000 mi. away were of vital interest to Europe. Near at hand there was one man who in two brief scenes made things much clearer: U. S. Ambassador-at-Large Norman Hezekiah Davis. Geneva. To the interminable arguments of the League's Disarmament Conference came white-haired Mr. Davis with an important statement. Announcing U. S. approval of the MacDonald Disarmament Plan (TIME, March 27),* he added: "Part one of the British plan is designed to co-ordinate the efforts...
...Bring Your Family.' Last week a sitting-down-together by the President and the Prime Minister was suddenly and expertly arranged. In London was Norman Hezekiah Davis. President Hoover's Man-about-Europe and now President Roosevelt's Ambassador-at-Large. He called on Prime Minister MacDonald. In Washington two days later Ambassador Lindsay was summoned to the State Department, handed a personal message from President Roosevelt to be transmitted to Prime Minister MacDonald. Excerpt...
Secretary Hull will have a fellow Tennesseean to work with in the person of Norman Hezekiah Davis, President Hoover's Man-About-Europe, chairman of the U. S. delegation to the Disarmament Conference...
...with President Hoover and his aides as they hustled to the Red Room to receive their callers. Beneath a fine Federalist cut-glass chandelier President Hoover sat down on a plum-colored velvet couch. Mr. Roosevelt was nodded into a seat beside him. Secretaries Stimson and Mills, Democrat Norman Hezekiah Davis and Professor Raymond Moley distributed themselves nearby. Mr. Hoover, as usual, took a cigar. Mr. Roosevelt, as usual, took a cigaret...