Word: ousted
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Ambassador's plane landed him in Miami, exiled Cuban foes of President Grau embarrassed Mr. Welles by hailing him as one who had "done his best" to oust the President. An impulsive anti-Grau senorita made the Ambassador blush by flinging her arms around his neck and whispering something...
...little use had Mr. Peek for their ideas that he had practically picked a separate AAA staff to avoid having to deal with the Braintrusters. Unable on his part to oust Mr. Frank, one of his most outright opponents, he had retained at his own expense Frederic Lee as his personal counsel. First result of the two factions working at cross purposes was virtual sabotage of the AAA program. The Braintrusters held up codes for packers and food distributors because they wanted stiff provisions to socialize those industries. Mr. Peek held back on crop restriction plans because he wanted more...
Last September Hupp Motor Car Corp.'s biggest stockholder, Promoter Archie Moulton Andrews, backed a proxy campaign to oust the entire management of Hupp, particularly Directors Charles Hayden and Moritz Rosenthal who are potent in Hupp affairs. The proxy appeal to stockholders said: "It is sufficient ... to point out one record which shows that the president of your company, during two years, drew $250,000 of salary while the company reported losses in excess of $8,000,000. . . . Large stockholders . . . feel that it is about time that the management of the corporation is brought to the realization that...
...office force of 17 cost the city $116,730. Candidate LaGuardia recalled that although Mr. McKee had written the Mayor in 1926 that he would attend no more secret conferences on the notorious Equitable Bus franchise deal, a flagrant piece of grafting which did more than anything else to oust Mayor Walker (TIME, June 6, 1932), McKee did later vote for the franchise to be granted. "Actions," taunted Candidate LaGuardia, "speak louder than words." At this point Samuel Seabury, patron saint of Fusion, chimed in: "They're mak-ing a primary out of an election. Fusion nominated a ticket...
Last spring Mr. McKee made no effort to have his name entered in the Democratic primaries voted last fortnight (TIME, Oct. 2). He preferred to retire to a $50,000-a-year bank job. He was offered the top place on a Fusion ticket to oust Tammany from the City Hall in next month's elections. Like Caesar, Joseph McKee for the third time waved away his honors. It therefore surprised many of his fellow citizens, disgusted many more, and dismayed both Fusion and Tammany when, last week, after a fortnight's indecision culminating in a 48-hour...