Word: sayed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Some gentlemen may rise in horror and say, 'Why, Mr. Lewis has made a personal attack on Mr. Garner.' Yes, I make a personal attack on Mr. Garner for what he is doing, because Garner's knife is searching for the quivering, pulsating heart of labor. And I am against...
...being that sort of man Wendell Willkie gets $75,000 a year, but he has never owned an automobile. (Old Indiana friends say that when he did try driving an automobile he was a menace, always arguing over his shoulder, frequently letting go the wheel to gesture with both hands.) Between his apartment on Manhattan's upper Fifth Avenue and his office on narrow, downtown Pine Street he uses subways and taxicabs...
...gets the time from waiters, or from clocks in store windows, and one of the duties of his man secretary is to tell him the time. The other duties of the secretary include seeing that his clothes are pressed and that he sometimes gets a haircut. His critics say that it's a pose, his friends that he has always been that...
...Wendell Willkie casts an interested' but realistic eye. Stamped with anti-New Deal mark, he is still too much of a liberal to suit old-line Republicans. When friends ask him whether he intends to be a candidate he answers, "Wouldn't I be a sucker to say...
...ready to say whom he wants to see as the anti-New Deal candidate in 1940, Wendell Willkie has already picked his New Deal man: Franklin D. Roosevelt, whose ability as a public leader he admires, although he thinks it beclouded by vindictiveness...