Word: mentionable
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Death" against the Versailles Treaty. Because like many another Californian he hates & fears Japan, he believes in the biggest possible Navy for the U. S. and therefore fought the London Naval Treaty (1930) almost singlehanded. He dislikes all foreign powers, suspects them of sinister plots against the U. S. Mention of the World Court infuriates him. His overseas outlook is almost precisely that of William Randolph Hearst whose newspapers glorify...
These blanks will be regarded as strict by confidential and all information given will be used without mention of names...
...accordance with the statement in the questionnaire and circular letter, which are reprinted in today's issue, no mention is or will be made of the names of the tutors who have sent in their answers or general comments...
...story of Governor Roosevelt's rise to be Man of the Year and 32nd President of the U. S. is fresh in mind. Future historians describing it as a feat of political mountain-climbing will not fail to mention...
...Mention of him in the New York Times and TIME was followed last month by a much-touted article in Alfred E Smith's New Outlook. Various radical weeklies in the U. S. and in Great Britain pecked at the subject. Meanwhile the drawing room chatter kept up; Technocracy became a vogue; the slower-moving magazines rushed m. Harpers for January carries an article as will the March Cosmopolitan (with foreword by the now somewhat embarrassed President Nicholas Murray Butler). The Saturday Evening Post expects one by Banker Vanderlip when he has discovered and verified what facts the Technocrats possess...