Word: hellos
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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Most frequent request was for the sound of relatives' voices. Producer Leslie Bridgmont firmly said no. "If we start that," he explained, "we'll wind up with a string of elderly ladies quavering 'Hello, Frank...
...business or banking, find it hard to escape Haldy. Unknown to them, they soon become "my boys," and he is apt to stop them anywhere on campus. "Say, Smithers," he may call out, "I ran across a book you might like . . . Just happen to have it with me," or "Hello there, Smithers, I wonder if you could help me on a little problem." "Before I knew it," said a would-be lawyer who had been subjected to this sort of thing, "I was majoring in chemistry...
...allows much more time for outside activities, not connected with education, than most college presidents. He makes a great many non-Columbia speeches and sees a lot of minor persons who just want to come to his office and say hello...
Each morning, as White House Messenger Robert M. Goodloe lifted the curtain from Flash's silvery, over-sized cage, the bird would greet him with a dulcet, patronizing "Hello, boy." As girl workers arrived, beady-eyed Flash greeted them with wolf calls. When crossed, which was seldom, Flash cussed the air blue. He was fond of raisins, and newsmen slipped him plenty, though some said he preferred bourbon...
...gates to the mill, Taft was confronted by a line of angry men, greeted by a din of jeers and catcalls. Disregarding the advice of city detectives, he ordered his car slowed down. He leaned out his car window, grinned and said: "Hello there, fellows." Most of the strikers, he reported afterward, "smiled back at me when I waved and seemed glad to meet a notorious person." Inside the mill, Taft got a friendly reception from other workers, some of whom turned away from their furnaces and rollers to shake his hand...