Word: randolph
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...United Press asked William Randolph Hearst whom he would support for President in 1936. Answer: "Probably Mr. Roosevelt...
...original portions of the House, Randolph and Westmorely Halls, were erected at a cost of more than $200,000 each, not in the dormitory tradition of architecture, but as living quarters for the more affluent students of the period just prior to the inauguration of the House Plan. The interiors of Randolph and Westmorely, while not as "modern" as those of some of the houses, have the speciousness and grandeur germane to an are when the art of living was perfected to a degree. The new central portion of the House, Russell Hall, has the interior style of the newer...
...name appeared last week on the city staff schedule of William Randolph Hearst's San Francisco Examiner. It was a new hireling, a cub reporter. His hours: 10 a. m. to 6:30 p. m., Monday through Friday. First day of the schedule, the cub failed to show up for work. Second day, he went to lunch with the Examiner's business manager, did not return. No assistant city editor rebuked him. The cub's name: Randolph Apperson Hearst...
Tall, handsome, athletic, Randolph is one of the 19-year-old Hearst twins, youngest sons of the publisher. Graduated from Lawrenceville School in New Jersey last year, he followed in his father's footsteps to Harvard. His father was rusticated out of Harvard for scholastic deficiency 50 years ago. Son Randolph was ousted at midyear with "E" grades in four subjects. Also like his father Randolph returned to San Francisco. Examiner oldsters were forewarned of his arrival, ordered to treat him like any other cub reporter except that he was not to be fired, not to be called...
...others take a darker view. William Randolph Hearst and certain members of the U. S. Senate believe that the U. S. is 1) depleting valuable national resources by shipping scrap, and 2) unwittingly helping Japan build a more powerful military machine for aggressive action. They point to the fact that Japan's sharp increase in scrap buying (500% in three years) has taken place since 1931, when fighting began in Manchuria. Hence some members of the Senate Munitions Committee, which is currently investigating Japanese purchases in the U. S., favor an embargo on scrap exports...