Word: photograph
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...this Harry Bridges which you name "Labor's Harry Bridges" so long will it be impossible for the country to find high-grade statesmanlike men for its leaders. As an alternative to this policy of exhibiting diseased labor mentalities why not try printing an accurate unbiased descriptio and photograph of some of our famous men whose efforts have been to make America, not destroy...
...great basin of foaming fountains, flanked by assorted foreign pavilions. Massive-pillared Egypt is a heavy splash of deep red; Rumania scintillates with a faqade of rare stone from her rich mines; Austria is a building the whole front of which is a glass serving to frame a gigantic photograph at the rear, so that one seems to look not at a structure but at Alpine heights; and Norway is all beer, fur and skis. Beyond lies Italy, a pavilion where oranges and lemons arrive each day so completely ripe and fresh from the groves, that no sugar is used...
Your description of the Youngstown Steel Strike included a list of weapons picked up by the strikers (TIME, July 5). Among the ones listed was a machete. This same machete was probably the most villainous looking item in the photograph which appeared in a number of papers and in the magazine LIFE...
Story of Montague's arrest contrasted sharply with reports of all his previous Hollywood activities. Shy no longer, he last week posed for photographers as often as they wanted, even let them photograph his hands to show how he held a golf club in his celebrated fingers. Asked how he had succeeded in Hollywood he answered: "I let the other guy's girl alone." Still amiable, he discussed the holdup: "I got into a jam when I was a wild young kid. . . . I'm glad it's over. I had intended going East and clearing this...
Unmentioned by the World-Telegram was a smaller but even more obvious slip on the part of John L. Lewis. He was photographed last week with his wife and son at a party at the Soviet Embassy in Washington (see cut). Even Chief Justice Hughes has attended functions at the Russian Embassy. But as every good public relations counsel knows, one photograph open to misinterpretation is worth more to the enemy than a barrage of scurrilous speeches. And last week from Germany, United Press relayed just the kind of chit-chat to make such a John Lewis' Soviet Embassy...