Word: lippmanns
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Senate the decision also had an effect on Senator Wagner's National Labor Relations Bill, whose fundamental premises had suddenly been given a set of question marks. Only nonpartisan who saw a silver lining for President Roosevelt & friends in the Weirton case outcome was Pundit Walter Lippmann. Said he: "What has been attempted under NRA . . . is a mixture of good and evil. . . . It was bound to break down. It has broken down. And the courts will do an historic service not only to the nation as a whole, but to recovery and reform, to the President and his party...
Married. Mrs. Daisy Baum Lippmann, mother of Pundit Walter Lippmann; and Isidor M. Stettenheim, Manhattan insurance man; in Manhattan...
...will recall that Walter Lippmann in his admirably written and poorly delivered Godkin lectures of last year had much to say about the necessity for compensatory action on the part of an administration: when the people spend recklessly, the state must save; when the people become too thrifty, then the state must spend. As Mr. Lippmann stated in last Saturday's article, "the very essence of a tree central bank is that it must act contrary to the prevailing mood in politics and finance." What Mr. Lippmann failed to do in his lectures, it seems to me, was to offer...
...shall we safeguard the Integrity of our central board? How can we Insure that they will have sufficient intestinal fortitude to withstand the criticism and abuse which will be hurled at them for putting on the "brakes" "when business is booming," to borrow again from the lips of Lippmann? As he himself, indicates, the problem cannot be solved simply by insuring the members of the central board an adequate salary. The writer of Today and the sage of Tomorrow observes that in large part this must depend "upon the capacity of the board itself to establish a tradition in which...
...hack for a pittance and Gabriel Over the White House became startlingly prophetic of the New Deal's early endeavors. The new President was so impressed that he had the film made from the book shown twice at the White House and Pundit Walter Lippmann composed a high-minded sermon on its lack of intrinsic importance. Now, without benefit of a rewrite-man, the Briton who learned his political realism under David Lloyd George has tried it again, in another fuzzy apocalyptic novel of the future...