Word: raymonde
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...World-Telegram soon developed into Mayor LaGuardia's most vigilant critic. And so have Scripps-Howard papers recently delivered stinging attacks against certain aspects of the New Deal, largely through Columnists Raymond Clapper and Westbrook Pegler. Publisher Howard went on record in 1932 as a friend of the New Deal's "principles," chiefly because he believes that they alone are sufficiently resilient to give but not shatter under the pressure of what he sees as a world-wide Leftward swing. Does his present critical attitude indicate that he has fundamentally changed his mind about Roosevelt & Co.? Last week...
Significant was the fact that this proposal, which at any previous GOP pre-convention gathering would have been dismissed as raving lunacy, was dismissed in Cleveland last week as merely unstrategic and impractical. Cracked Scripps-Howard's Raymond Clapper: "Republicans won't win this election by operating a comfort station for anti-New Deal Democrats...
...when the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Raymond Brandt asked whether the President had read an article in the current Saturday Evening Post praising Charles Michelson's astuteness, the President cocked an interested eye at the Democratic pressagent seated nearby...
Stroke, James F. Chace '38; 7, Raymond S. Clark '36; 6, John R. Clark '38; 5, Leonard P. Eliel '36; 4, Douglas Erickson '38; 3, Robert S. Wolcott '36; 2, Roger W. Cutler, Jr. '37; bow, J. Paul Austin '37; cox, Edward H. Bennett...
...front of his commonplace Silver Kimono with his model, Jane Erwin, and Governor Hoffman. There were also four sentimental landscapes suitable for calendars, an unbelievably bad poster pumpkin, an indigestible moon in a green sky and some portraits. Bleated New Jersey Art Critic and Columbia University Art Instructor Raymond O'Neill: "This show will make New Jersey appear to be painting in a corner away from the march of art and time. To tell the truth, it's hard to get steamed up enough to attack these pictures. They are grand examples of artistic decadence. . . . Everyone will...