Word: broadcaster
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...very much surprised to learn during last night's broadcast that the White House has requested that the President's voice be imitated no longer on your program...
...seems to me that you have more right to picture the President in a serious and sincere manner in a radio broadcast than a caricaturist has to draw a distorted cartoon. ... Or supposed statements of the President are quoted in humorous magazines, likewise giving the public wrong impressions. Will Rogers always glibly tells of some meeting he had with this or that President, quoting fanciful statements made by the latter. If others can use the President's name, pictures or statements for the purpose of joking, why should not "The March of TIME" be free to make a pretense...
...nominal Republican, I viewed the election of Mr. Roosevelt with misgivings. Then, on March 4th, the Inaugural Address swayed me in my judgment. March 4th, and the first Sunday evening broadcast sent a tingle up my spine. I thanked God that 1 was an American, and that at long last America had a leader...
TIME regrets that it can accommodate neither Reader Cook & wife nor Reader Leigh. On request of the White House (see p. 4) the "voice" of President Roosevelt will no longer be heard on "The March of TIME" or any other broadcast. The "voice," that of William Perry ("Bill") Adams will continue to speak for Senator Borah, President von Hindenburg, many another bigwig, many a lowly character in the news. "Bill" Adams, onetime professional baseballer, onetime stage actor and dramatic coach at Yale, turned to radio in 1925. For four years he was "Uncle Henry" on the old Collier...
President Abelardo Rodriguez had something so important to say to Mexico last week that for the first time all Mexican radio stations were linked in a national hookup. He broadcast...