Word: paged
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...first time since the turn of the year Franklin Roosevelt retired last week to the inside pages of the nation's press. If the President was startled by the antagonism displayed by the little businessmen (see p. 11 ) toward him and his Administration, he did not indicate it, for he let them run wild on the front page. In the uproar over foreign policy (see col. 2) he took no visible part. With vocal Congressmen trying desperately to force him to redefine his stand, the closest approach to a statement on foreign policy the President made last week...
...best newspapers, like the best people, make mistakes. But seldom is any paper so unfortunate as was the exemplary New York Times last week. One morning the Times's sober obituary page carried accounts of two famed men who had died the day before, Fairfax Harrison, onetime president of the Southern Railway, and Engineer Dexter Parshall Cooper, father of Passamaquoddy's tidal-harnessing project. Each was illustrated with a picture. Unfortunately, the purported likeness of Mr. Harrison bore the easily recognizable features of John Jeremiah Pelley, president of the Association of American Railroads, the picture of Mr. Cooper...
...twin tail of the Lockheed 14H-resembling from the rear a letter H with two vertical tail fins and rudders attached to a wide horizontal stabilizer-is designed to increase controllability and stability in flight. Savoia-Marchetti, Sikorsky. Consolidated, Handley Page. Mitsubishi all have models with similar twin tails. Knowing that if "flutter"-vibration so violent that it shakes metal like a piece of cloth -developed anywhere it would be in the tail structure, Lockheed engineers and Chief Test Pilot Marshall Headle worked for months to eliminate the possibility, finally satisfied themselves and the B. A. C. that they...
...suddenly died. Last week, having waited for official confirmation of many rumors that Field's was purging the McKinsey policies and people, the Chicago Journal of Commerce headlined the Margeson resignation announcement FIELD'S TO MAKE SWEEPING CHANGES IN MCKINSEY POLICIES, put it on the front page. Pressagent Schaeffer, horribly embarrassed, hurriedly denied that Chicago's biggest department store would make any such changes. He said that Mr. Margeson, bitter about being forced out of Field's, had written and released his own resignation statement. Explained Pressagent Schaeffer: "Sour grapes...
...policy in his office daily from 10 until 11 o'clock; the Managing Editor, in direct control of all news stories, will hold office hours from 11 until 12, and 5 until 6 o'clock daily; and the Editorial Chairman, in charge of all matters pertaining to the editorial page, will hold office hours from 9 until 10 o'clock every morning...