Word: randolph
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...been repeatedly suggested in these columns that some convenient form of telephone service be installed in the Houses. For those who object to paying for a private installation the system used in Randolph Hall is ideal. There every study is fitted with a telephone, which operates from a private exchange for the building. The only charge to the occupants of the suites is a five cent toll on each outside call which they make. Calls originating outside, or wholly within the building, are free. Since all the rooms in the Houses are already wired for telephones, there should...
...stands, the Adams House unit is made up of the former Westmorely Court to the east, and the former Randolph Hall to the west, with the new "C" Entry occupying a central position between the two buildings. A subway passage, which goes under Plympton Street and extends from Randolph to Westmorely, unites the various buildings in Adams House into a single residential unit...
Puffs. A 30-year friendship links Mr. McAdoo and Publisher William Randolph Hearst. When Mr. Hearst picked Speaker Garner as a presidential winner last spring, Mr. McAdoo was his first and only important recruit. Mr. Hearst was as much responsible for the shift play at Chicago resulting in the Roosevelt nomination as Mr. McAdoo. They both feared and hated internationally-minded Newton Diehl Baker as a deadlock candidate. Californians were not surprised this month when five Hearstpapers (Los Angeles Examiner and Herald & Express, San Francisco Examiner and Call and Oakland Post-Enquirer) began puffing the McAdoo Senatorial candidacy...
...McAdoo reputation in Wall Street. Today he is thought of rather as a lanky, uncouth Westerner, flapping a cowboy hat, who backed "that wild man Garner" for the Presidency and then traded him off on Roosevelt. And over the McAdoo shoulder is seen the shaking finger of dictatorial William Randolph Hearst...
...Macfadden press has millions of readers of precisely the type to which Nominee Roosevelt is addressing his candidacy. Should Mr. Roosevelt be elected President. Bernarr Macfadden might look forward to sitting in at White House councils on an equal footing with Mr. Roosevelt's other publishing ally, William Randolph Hearst...