Word: sullivans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Donahue 1,353 GOVERNOR Bacon 31,586 Curley 41,670 Goodwin 16,877 Cole 20,146 Goodwin 1,513 LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR Haigis (No Contest) Hurley 590 Kelley 197 SECRETARY OF STATE Cook (No Contest) Santosuosso 266 Blake 44 Buckley 168 Dugan 68 O'Brien 37 Riley 11 Sullivan 58 TREASURER Dionne 1,534 Hurley (No Contest) Vinson 1,117 ATTORNEY-GENERAL Warner (No Contest) Dever 163 Dever 51 Chaponar 71 Sullivan 105 AUDITOR Cook 1,591 Buckley 505 Plgeon 1,071 Walsh 136 Atherton 179 Rich...
...International Settlements, foresaw an early return to the gold standard. . . . William Gibbs McAdoo had always found Upton Sinclair "a fine fellow and one of genuine sincerity . . . but I don't want to commit myself." . . . Sir Ronald Lindsay, British Ambassador, boomed and hawed amiably, sang a snatch of Gilbert & Sullivan. . . . Frank Arthur Vanderlip tossed pearls that he might have sold to the Saturday Evening Post: "My deductions from talk with Minister of Economics Schacht is that things in Germany will be worse before they get better. Their need of cotton is acute. Their need of metal can be staved...
...copyright law, he was determined to give Manhattan a production of H. M. S. Pinafore which would rout his unscrupulous competitors. Then he was to plunge into rehearsals for the premiere of The Pirates of Penzance, whose production was impeded at the start by the absentmindedness of pious Arthur Sullivan. In his haste to make a later boat, Composer Sullivan had left behind in his London flat the entire score...
...year-old apprehension. Unlike his father, however, Rupert D'Oyly Carte remained in London, while the 54 members of the venerable D'Oyly Carte Opera Company made their first appearance in Manhattan. By the divine right of apostolic succession, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company is to Gilbert & Sullivan what Comedie Franchise is to Moliere, what Bayreuth is to Wagner, what the Moscow Art Theatre is to Chekov, what the Abbey Theatre is to Synge. But any number of things could turn the Savoyards' invasion of New York into a hopeless dispersion: overbilling, overconfidence or just plain cussedness...
...pages Frank R. Kent, famed Washington columnist of the independent Baltimore Sun, has collected his running commentary on the New Deal. He does not like it. But he thinks the new policies must run their course. There is no road back. No gloomy Republican of the Mark Sullivan stamp, he finds himself frequently speaking through a hypothetical character called "the old-fashioned Democrat." "Where are we going?" he asks. Old-Fashioned Democrat answers by being reminded of Columbus: "He did not know where he was going when he started. He did not know where he was when he got there...