Word: hues
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Wall Street liked Mr. Meyer, the insurgent farm members of Congress did not. When his confirmation comes before the Senate, it was predicted that all the old hue and cry about turning the Federal Reserve Board over to Wall Street would be raised against him. This complaint, plus the fact that he is a Jew of French extraction, has in the past seriously retarded able Mr. Meyer's political progress...
...week's most astonishing turn against the Farm Board's wheat policy occurred not on the Legge-Hyde barnstorming trip but in Washington where Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas, staunch Administration supporter, joined the hue and cry for the Board to buy more wheat. Earlier in the week, through the Republican National Committee, Senator Capper had issued a political statement praising the Board and its chairman. Mr. Legge's appointment, he said, "has proved one of the most notable to public service in many years." President Hoover, he insisted, had fulfilled his farm aid pledges of the campaign...
Time Killing. Unable to kill the Treaty, "Captain" Johnson killed time instead by a great hue and cry for all the confidential papers leading up to and through the London parley. He was indignant when Secretary of State Stimson sent him only paraphrases of these papers...
...Republican Senator Arthur Raymond Robinson, a lobby chaser, a Huston friend, announced his intention of summoning Mr. Raskob before the same committee and interrogating him sharply as to his contributions to the association against the 18th Amendment and his activities in behalf of Wet legislation. For months the Democratic hue and cry against Mr. Raskob as a Wet Catholic has been quiescent. Party leaders have tried to forget Prohibition, to weld the wings of Democracy together again for the 1930 campaign. Shrewd Republican politicians saw the advantages in breaking the rival party once more by the simple method of putting...
...This exhibit is a Soviet caricature of the Sacrament of Holy Communion. It is depicted in such a gross, revolting and ghastly form that its public reproduction is impossible. The dismembered and disembowelled body of the dead Christ, depicted in a pale green hue, is surrounded by a group of priests, peasants and laymen who are ravenously devouring the flesh and drinking the blood which pours from the Saviour's side. Several of the figures, with countenances of maniacs and ghouls, are pulling forth the intestines and mouthing them...