Word: term
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...were the special interests who were spoiling the show? Harry Truman came no closer to defining his term than to refer four times and scathingly to "the Republicans." But, after all, his own party was in the majority. Obviously not all of the Democratic cast were in sympathy with the Democratic author...
...newspapers, having spread the initials on their front pages, dutifully clucked about it on their editorial pages. A few gave it cautious approval. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch applauded: "We can well understand the President's use of the term S.O.B. as applied to a certain showman and think that, considering all the circumstances, it was very well applied." There was no great outcry from churchmen and no noticeable explosion from the public, all of which caused the anti-New Dealing New York Sun's George Sokolsky to complain virtuously: "The reaction to the President's language...
Daniel A. Mulvehill was named to his eighth term as president of the Harvard University Employees Representative Association at the union's eleventh birthday dinner at the Hotel Continental last night...
...awards for 1949-1950 will be made on the basis of the applications filed next month. No awards will be made next February for the spring term, as was done previously...
Tonight at the Hotel Continental, Mulverhill will be installed as president for his eighth term in office. Co-workers credit him for much of the union's progress and expansion, and he is generally regarded as a local "F.D.R...