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...Rep. Dem. Sec. Ala. 3 2 3 Ariz. 3 0 0 Ark. 3 3 0 Cal. 47 17 15 Col. 8 2 1 Conn. 49 16 15 Del. 3 0 1 D.C. 5 3 2 Florida 6 0 2 Ga. 11 7 2 Hawaii 4 0 2 Idaho 3 2 0 III. 57 20 15 Ind. 19 2 1 Iowa 13 6 3 Kan. 3 0 0 La. 2 1 1 Md. 9 3 1 Maine 17 3 5 Mass. 698 147 127 Mich. 22 4 6 Minn. 23 6 7 Miss. 18 14 6 Mont. 5 1 1 Nebr...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Result of Voting by States | 10/21/1932 | See Source »

Eight Keynotes. Considering that one-quarter of the world's population was rep resented at the Conference, with eight distinct His Majesty's Governments* represented, the Conference did well to finish its keynoting on the first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: A Little Bird Told Me. . . . | 8/1/1932 | See Source »

...officially stated that ''the American Government is pleased," but Congressmen & Senators who spoke out on the Lausanne settlement last week mostly spoke against cancelling another cent of the nine billions which Europe owes the U. S. in War Debts. Such potent voices as those of Senator Borah (Rep.) and Senator Glass (Dem.) were not heard last week. The Senate tabled and ignored a resolution by Oklahoma's Thomas Pryor Gore (Dem.) demanding whether "the European Powers which are indebted to the United States and which received, as a result of the War, an allotment of Germany...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Lausanne Peace on Earth | 7/18/1932 | See Source »

...together in 1929 when Mr. Giannini, anticipating his retirement, looked for a leader to replace him. Mr. Walker, he thought, possessed prestige as well as brilliance and was a man of broad enough vision to carry on the dreams of the branch banking and in vestment empire which Transamerica rep resented. Soon after Mr. Giannini retired friction became apparent. Friends of Mr. Walker think that when, in the early part of 1930, he became fully familiar with the task ahead of him, he was aghast at the true situation, and has since labored tirelessly to turn Transamerica fiction into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: On to Wilmington | 2/15/1932 | See Source »

...least reason for optimism was the selection of the railroads' chief rep-resentative?"Uncle Dan." An up-from-the-tracks man, he enjoys the unanimous respect of organized railroad Labor. On his own line this takes the form of something approximating beatification. The judgment of B. & O. employes on him is: "One square guy!" Many a road used President Willard's "B. & O. Plan" to settle the shopmen's strike of 1922. As they prepared to sit down and thresh out together the first major wage problem since 1916, workers and operators of 249,000 U. S. rail miles felt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TRANSPORTATION: Work, Wages & Willard | 1/11/1932 | See Source »

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