Word: hiram
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...graduate of the University of Chicago (1897), Secretary Ickes began practicing law in 1907, still has a small office on La Salle Street. In 1912 he became a rampant Bull Mooser but in 1916 was behind Hughes, only to switch to Cox four years later. In 1924 he managed Hiram Johnson's abortive Illinois campaign...
...Senate, white-crested Hiram Johnson, the California Republican who bolted his party to campaign for Franklin Delano Roosevelt, shouted that the U. S. has everything to lose, nothing to gain by entering the War Debt parleys which Mr. Roosevelt specifically approves. Flaying the British Chancellor, Senator Johnson accused cold, cultured Neville Chamberlain of possessing what no member of the historic House of Chamberlain was ever ashamed to have-a superiority complex...
...heard Mr. Roosevelt's wish that the Domestic Allotment plan be limited to wheat, cotton, hogs and tobacco, that it be enacted by this session in time to be effective for the 1933 crops. Cultured Senator Bronson Cutting of New Mexico came because he was a boyhood friend. Hiram Johnson was there out of Republican cussedness. The Press-as smiled off with the comment that its questions were "very intelligent and very embarrassing." At this point occurred the journalistic event...
...Michigan, John D. Rice, L '27, 2288 First National Bank Bldg., Detroit, Mich.; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Eldred M. Keays '07, 110 East Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee.; Minnesota, Reuel D. Harmon '26, C/o Webb Publishing Co., St. Paul, Minn.; Philadelphia, Morris Duane '23, 1617 Land Title Bldg., Philadelphia; Rochester, N. Y., Hiram W. Sibley, 2nd, 404 East Avenue, Rochester N. Y.; Western Pennsylvania, Wells Fay '26, 1312 Park Building, Pittsburgh...
...came another, a 15? fortnightly on pulp stock named Common Sense, in which Writer Liggett again was the most conspicuous contributor. But Common Sense was distinguished by other characteristics. Its founders and chief editors are 27-year-old Alfred Mitchell Bingham, Yale law graduate, son of Republican Senator-reject Hiram Bingham of Connecticut; Selden Rodman, founder and former editor of The Harkness Hoot, literate, insurgent Yale undergraduate magazine; and Charles C. Nicolet. able newsman who quit the New York World-Telegram to assist them. Deriving its name from Thomas Paine's 1776 pamphlet. Common Sense promised to "stand...