Word: scandale
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Political experts long since revised the wheeze, "As Maine Goes, So Goes the Nation." (James A. Farley's revision: "As Maine Goes, So Goes Vermont.") This year, scandal in the State House involving Republican Controller William A. Runnells spread a haze in the sky. The personal popularity of Louis Jefferson Brann, former Democratic Governor, candidate for U. S. Senator, also made Republican leaders reluctant to have the Maine vote used as an augury of what will happen in November in the rest of the country. Nevertheless young Oren Root Jr., head of the Associated Willkie Clubs, marched...
...post-Insull afterglow of U. S. high-financeering, No. 1 utility scandal was tubby Howard C. Hopson's rancid Associated Gas & Electric. Today Hopson is self-allegedly feebleminded; his goons are dead, broke and scattered; his insolvent empire has become the largest reorganization in the history of U. S. business (TIME, March 4). A. G. & E. is simultaneously a ward of the Federal courts, a debtor of the U. S. Treasury (for at least $5,000,000 of unpaid taxes), and a regulatee of SEC, which Hopson's 1935 utility lobby tried to keep out of the utility...
...Argentine Deputy rushed from the halls of Congress, pumped a bullet through his brain; another resigned; two others whipped out their pistols in a sunrise duel; two generals were whisked off to jail; President Roberto M. Ortiz resigned. All these were ripples spread by an investigation of a graft scandal...
Last week President Ortiz was back in office, his honor intact. The scandal was blowing over. It had never amounted to much anyway: the War Ministry had authorized the payment of $558,669 for some airport land that was worth perhaps one fifth as much. But the scandal and its repercussions had given some astute political dealers a chance to deal the President out of the game...
Fellowe was Hungarian Pianist Franz Liszt. One of the women was the Countess Marie d'Agoult. She had caused quite a scandal by leaving her husband and running away with Liszt after they had wept together over one of those novels by George Sand in which the heroines always prefer passion to domesticity. The Piffoel family was Authoress Sand and her children. Part of the confusion of genders came about because Liszt's brilliant pupil, Hermann Cohen, another of the party, insisted on wearing girl's clothes. Madame Sand insisted on wearing men's clothes. They...