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Senator Andre Honnorat of France, to tell President Coolidge about the Cite Universitaire foundation in Paris, to which many countries, including the U. S., have been invited to contribute dormitories for their nationals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: The Coolidge Week: Mar. 26, 1928 | 3/26/1928 | See Source »

...opposition to the McNary-Haugen bill and partly upon the famous dollar-wheat decision of the Food Administration in war days. Hoover makes no bones of his opposition to the McNary-Haugen bill but his friends insist that he had nothing to do with the dollar-wheat decision, and cite evidence to prove their case. That evidence is now being carried to the tribunal of the nation--the people...

Author: By Charles Merz, | Title: Presidential Possibilities | 3/16/1928 | See Source »

...Klux Klan is sure that Smith's foreign policy would be to deliver the United States into the hands of Rome. There are other observers who cite Smith's refusal to be swept off his feet in the post-war Bolshevist hysteria as proof that if he were elected President he would show foresight liberality, and cool-headedness in his foreign policy, that he would leave this department of the Government largely in the hands of his advisers...

Author: By Charles Merz, | Title: Presidential Possibilities | 3/16/1928 | See Source »

...their labor troubles have thrust them. This the I. C. C. has no power to do, as was sharply suggested by the Senate last month. The barb in the Senate's pending investigation of the I. C. C. (TIME, Feb. 20) is a clause directing the Commissioners to cite statutory authorities for each & every one of their decisions during the past five years wherein "the reasonableness of any rate or rates were in any sense influenced by the competitive advantage" of the producers of one section over another...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TRANSPORTATION: Decisions | 3/5/1928 | See Source »

...course, appealed. Harry Ford Sinclair, looking like a tired Mussolini, had plenty of money left to go on arguing that any man with money enough is as fully entitled to shadow juries as is the U. S. Government. To support this contention, Sinclair's lawyers might even cite certain earlier activities of William J. Burns, when he was Chief of the U. S. Bureau of Investigation under the defamed Daugherty regime. Another argument which, though it failed to impress Justice Siddons, the Sinclair lawyers may try out on the U. S. Supreme Court, is this: that Sinclair hired...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: CORRUPTION | 3/5/1928 | See Source »

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