Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...sleek, black-haired, punctilious Henry M. Kannee, 40, his shorthand-man since Sept. 12, 1932. Scrupulous Henry, who worships F. D. R., left behind in the White House a file-full of his stenographer's notebooks, fat with more than nine years of secrets; left with the high regard of White House reporters, who were eternally grateful to him for many things but especially one-the night of Feb. 15, 1933, at the Miami Bay Front Park when Giuseppe Zangara shot at Franklin Roosevelt, fatally wounded Chicago's Mayor Anton Joseph Cermak instead. All White House reporters were...
...labor leader, steelmen regard him publicly with the suspicion that they reserve for labor leaders. But privately they respect him. Said one steel executive: "He handles his own crowd better than most steel company presidents handle theirs." They know him as a hard bargainer, but they admit that he is square...
What outside journalists write about Harvard we can do little to control. What you as editors select for quotation concerns us all. Every Harvard man must be disturbed by the way in which, in your quotation of this morning from a Washington paper, President Conant's personal position in regard to the war was pictured as affecting the justice of his relations within the University. There is not a shred of basis for this imputation: and many would welcome it if the Crimson would express the strong feeling of Harvard on this point, since the University cannot but suffer when...
Whether this democratization is real it is still too early to say; the impending conscription of British labor must give even America's War Liberals pause. But there is still a stronger reason to regard the Two-Front argument as a liberal obfuscation so far as America is concerned. For we have had no Dunkirk to frighten our economic ruling group; nor have we a single, unified, political labor movement with recognized leaders ready to step into the government. Consequently, to America the war has thus far meant the strengthening of the hand of the economic royalist; a halting...
...great deal of effort has been made to control factors 1 and 2, to make environmental factors more ideal for safety and to eliminate fear, worry, and so forth. In regard to factor 3, safety organizations have ben set up to take out the mechanical factors--i.e., in shops, to make the machinery and the working conditions safer--so that step 4, or the occurrence of accidents, may be minimized and so that step 5, the extent of injuries, may be lessened. But the degree of control which has been achieved differs quite widely according to the type of accident...