Word: laguardias
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...involve President Roosevelt, is finding his role very difficult as the waves recede on either side. First, it will be remembered, Mr. Curry tricked him into a pledge to support the regular Democratic candidate Dr. O'Brien. The President became a little restless under this stratagem, but when Mr. LaGuardia really let loose at McKee and Farley, he felt that a little easing was in order. Accordingly, Mr. Farley has been instructed to announce that his support of McKee is a personal fealty which does not involve Washington...
...city in the republic, chained to a political machine hopelessly inefficient and corrupt. Gladstone was no Platonic guardian, but there were limits which his vassals could not pass. Instead, the President was silent, and allowed his lieutenant to engineer a very questionable candidacy which threatened the success of Mr. LaGuardia, behind whom the large part of New York's civilized voters were aligned. Now he is attempting a dignified exit. But he lost a great opportunity to strike a blow for decent municipal government, and if Dr. O'Brien remains in power, New York will remember his failure...
...LaGuardia, New York's candidate for No. 3 political job in the U. S., unwise enough to believe he could compete with the "March of TIME" at 8:30 tonight! Though politically minded, I shall tune in on WABC rather than...
True to the traditions of American politics, Messrs, Laguardia, McKee, and O'Brien are hard at work in Manhattan tossing vehement accusations and rancid remarks at each other in well-meaning efforts to show John Public that at the polls he will have a choice between two hellers and one saint, the labels varying according to the speaker. O'Brien is busy pleading for fair play and no quotations; Laguardia occupies himself in smearing his two opponents with the same Tammany brush; and McKee spends his time replying to Judge Seabury's attacks. This is all according to Tweed...
...pledge. But many a silk-stocking Republican, to whom LaGuardia's radicalism is repugnant and who remembers how the gallant major bedeviled Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover, would quietly cast his vote for handsome, upright young Joe McKee. Adding Republican momentum to its original Democratic impetus, McKee's cueball had already clicked off O'Brien's white-ball, was rolling toward LaGuardia's redball. It looked as though a Hooverite kiss would make a Rooseveltian billiard. Wall street was betting 2-to-1 it would...