(Iowa City, Iowa), 1948-09-02

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Iowa City, Iowa), 1948-09-02 r They Weren't Alarmed The Weather Today PATEIlSON, N. I. (UP)-When the fire truck In the lire bouse at 7Z laebon street «lautht lire Y6~rday and Fair. Warmer in extreme east today. To­ the firemen couldn't put U out, they IIneW' jo I wbai to morrow fair and warm. High today around do. Thel' tornN In a Ilre alarm. at owal1 90; low tonight 60. Yesterdayls high was Three other Pa~rson companies responded and pul 77; lowl 63. Pollen count 396. out the blue. Eat. l86S-Vol. 80, No. 288- UP. AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City. Iowa, Thursday. Sept.2. 1945-Five Cents Fourth Liberal-Labor Group President Truman Gets CIO-PAC Support Endorses Truman Candidacy Berlin Chiefs In WA HINGTO (JPj- P r id nl Truman won the ndo em nt for election of his fou rth labor -liberal g roup y terday- tbe I politieal act ion committee. A fifth- the Liberal Party of New York- 8rrang d to hook its wagon to the Truman slar at 8 n ight m eting in few York ity. Exc pt for the American Labor party in r w Y ork, whicb is upportin.g H enry A . Wallace's Second Parley Progr sive party candidacy, and some other for mer new deal elements backing the former vice­ SegregaUon Again president, the Truman-Barkley ticket n6w has won the o{,ficial Halts Wallace Talk Blockade End 'Squealed On' by a Silent Doll support of majori ty strength in li beral groups which used to rally NEW Y RK ( A dop d-up mamma doll that couldn't say to the Roosevelt banner. In Southern Trip mamm till manag d to u al on tom n y t rd y. Includes OIO-PAC Seen Possible They include the OIO-PAC, BIRMINGHAM, ALA. (UP) Tbe meo, broth r., wer arl' t d and clillrg d with ill gal wlwse unanimo us support was Henry W[lUace refused to speak p s. ion f oar ot i ' . pledged Mr. Truman during B here late yesterday because police A eh on th brotb 1'8 ' a.ctinti 1 d to 8. sear 'h or tll ir White House caLI yesterday; the had segregated his audience of partm nt wbere a dpt th'" found doll or"tht' ty V th t says CIO executive board by a vote of 3,000 whites and 1,000 Negroes .. mamma" wh"o queez d. 35 to 12 , and a private 'Committee waiting at. the court-house steps. He qu z d it. But it wouldn't By 'ma mma." of most APL uniot:! heads, as well WalJac did nol even leave his II broke it open. IDllide, inst ad of the ,'oic box, police said, as the Americans for Democratic car. An aide explained that he found 8 bott Ie of eocain . Action , organized in 1947. would not address a segregated George HarriSOn , president of audience. Three eggs were thrown the Brotherhood of RaJ lroad at the aide while he spoke. None Clerks and organizing chairman of of them hit him, however. the new AFL pro-Truman com- Wallace continued on to subur­ Budenz Calls Stevens mltlee, told White House report- ban Bessemer, where seeregatlon ers he irTformed Mr. Tr uman th at laws had also been Invoked for the leaders or AFL unions having a occasion. membership of seven million are He failed to make a speech Top u.s. Communist now su pporting him. there, because city authorities had The anticipated backing by New barred .Negroes from the munici­ NEW YORK ( P )-Al and r Ste\' n., whom th govel'n­ Air circles llld Ul at pl'l'para­ York's liberal party was regarded pal pnrk, the only place available lions \\ f'rl' und r way for poslbl IIlt'llt seek t o d E' port II (\. r \' luUon-' 'king 'ommlloi t agent, by Democratic party leaders as a tor a po li tical address. About 100 "nding ot till' Anglo-Am rlean wa. til'. cribI'd yest rday III an Amprieoll 'ollllllunh;t who wield d probable big offset of ALP de!ec- persons booed when the aide 110 " r Illl 'ut as ( ,1 \V'rf'phot., airlift "Wi thin 10 d ys." We. t­ Ifr that i'ol'lller ly wi Ided by EorJ Browd r or er­ tions to the Wallace column. again set forth the anti-dlscrim- lInrt E isl r. The late President Roosevelt ination stand. PRESIDENT TR f AN AND CIO PRE IDENT Philip (urray shake rull1d at the Wblt 1I0u e ler lOn", railway officIal aId Iht'y carried New York state by only, Murray's all nouncemeut that the TO )JIllIUcal action commlttt'e woul d up,lorl 1T. Truman In tht' So v- hGd 1.>"1 n al rll'd to r ume nor- ' t l'n'Il., IlJIlO known II. ,. J. P t I' , " wa Ill' '1l ~!'( 1 ut (\. deporta­ 316,591 In 1944. The ALP and La~e r. In a r adio address from ember electlon. The aDnoon menL I'ame yesterday. t r In Ult' da tilt l'r sldput III d tat ml'nl 111 •.11 traffIc t{) B rlin "som tim tion h cU'ing by J.JOui F. Liberal parties each more than Blrm1Ogh am, Wallace charged that calltor for rtpeal or the T ft- Il rtlt'y labor d . B lwe n furr y and . lr. Tnlm n bove J ack Kroll. aft .. r Sf·lli. 5." Buut' lJ z. form r l'd itor of the made up his margin. The tormer northem steel interests we r e OJO · PA IlJrt'ctor. Hope that th blo kade might Benes Unconscious, Communist Daily Work r. Budenz cas t 496,405 votes and the latter responsible for ~he conditions oun iJ lifted was t: nine r- renounced the party, became a 329,235 for Roosevelt. whl c ~ prevented hiS gp echea he~e 111:111 nf'W P;IP r rt'porl (rom Mall­ Catholi c and look /I t aching job HUa T-H Act and 10 Gadsden, Ala., earlier ID cl~l>ul " ill the Soviet zon , stal­ Hope for Life Dims t Fordham university. A forerunner of what Mr. Tru- the day. Both are steel centers. Charles A. Beard in ' lllul Ru .·s ian-zone railway oe­ Seek To Averl Dock Strike ra'iuls hud pronounced the rail­ Bud nz • ld th at h took orden man may elaborate upon in his Wallace charged that Republic SEZIMOVO USTl, CZECHO­ from St vens over a thr e-year opening campaign speech next Steel and U.S. Steel's subsidiary. way betw n Berlin Dnd the w t ) Anemia Victim at 73 fit to handll' "any od of tr iahl SLOVAKIA (UP) Former period and was II ssiined to meet opening campaign speech next Tennessee Coal, lron and Railroad Pr id nt Eduard n s. uncon- members at th Sovl t lecret po­ Monday in Detroit was seen In a company, controlled the polltical und pa ·nec·r Il·arfil'." B The rollrulld had ortil'! lice. Labor day statement made public machines in the two cities. Bclous since cu rly Tuesday was clu ed (OJ: "Tf'pllirs." Th m lings, he said, took by the White House. --- not xp ct d to live throuah the place in var ious Child. restaur­ In it the President again called Says U. S. Airforce 3- llour Talk niahl, an otticlal spokesman 8ald 10r repeal ot the Tail-Hartley act., I st n ght. ants in New York and the Slev­ His statemen t came atop charg Settle Walkout at Till' miJitury governors of th from ens hotel In hlcago. H WBS dl­ curbing inflation to give workers Is 'Flexed for War' cnllqll 'r d country _ U.S. Gen. Ben B, 64, is Bute r lna more for their money, raiSing the hurled by wat rfront I' ct d to turn over Information Harvester Plants Oe3rd, who wrote ' tOllr than Llll'iu 0 luy, British C n. Sir hard ning ot th art ries. on antl-Stoli n Trotskylt groups minimum wage frm 40 to 75 cents ST. LOUIS (UP)- The U.S. air­ that CIO long:hore n gotintol'lI Urian RoJJ rWJJl. F r neh Lt. Gen. Although easily the most pop­ In the United Slat . an hour, providing social securi ty force is "flexed for war," Gen. were "stallln,," and had "no in· lllCACO (UP) _ The Cl 30 buoks in IllS long e81t rr d - l'ielT Ko 'mg and Sovi t Mar£hal ular figur In Cz cho lovakill . the and health insurance to addltional Hoyt S. Vandenberg, airfor ~ e chIef tention 01 r eaching- an ogreem nt" unit (/ autl) work rs union y lilt'f- vO!\'d to hh:lury nd polllic$, ,I- V. V . Sokolovsky · /TIpl tor I arly r publ chand Thomas .Ma. ryk S l vens, Budenz aid, WIIS a lop workers, and an enlarged depart­ of stult, said yesterday. In the continuous ncilotiullon bl'­ I J 'd Ull' h PJ, \.a l Aug. 2. thr huur. 1 te y tl!rdoy to di - founded litter World War I, III re Communi t w ith pow r as &real ment of labor with "adequate" clay 1C' . j~'hl'(l /I" 'rl'f>nwnl with II i "hy ..I C'1 ans said hi:; de ,th Though poised for quick acUon, ing conducted 1Il th ' fadlllg hours l 'U the pl'oblem brought uJ) t was no crowd oround his aumm r nl Browd r, once pr sldent of the statt and lunds.
Recommended publications
  • Portland Daily Press: October 09,1863
    DAILY PRESS. VOLUME II. FRIDAY PORTLAND, ME., MORNING, OCTOBER 0, 1863. WHOLE NO. 402. PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, MILITARY. BUSINESS CARDS. BUSINESS CARDS. MISCELLANEOUS. DRY GOODS. JOHN T. OILMAN. Editor, _____ FOR SALE & TO la at No. 82j EXCHANGE STREET, LET, published A CARD. IN FOX 11 LOCK, by Col. F. Fessenden’s .Util.* E. I'EIEX Al.ll. <'ouiitinir Koom to Let.-* N. A. FOSTER A CO. Regiment. SPECIAL ROOM over 90 DR. NOTICE. CorarajiThomas No. Commercial St S. C. FERNALD, THE LATEST NEWS! Block, to let. Appl/to N 7'erma : Attention, Veterans! MERCHANT „h1,„ J. MILLER. Tub TAILOR, 92 ( ommercialStreet. PORTLAND Daily Pkess is published every WVJ N T 1ST , ah1dtf_Over at $6.00 year in mornitig (Sundays excepted), tier ••SO!i to those from Portland! ST AIUDLE ANDERSON’S advance, to which will be added tvventy-fiye cents Knlistiiig No. 175 Nlidtll Street. STREET, To Lei for each three mouths' and it' not paid for at THOMAS fllHE commodious delay, Kbpkubnckr.Dr*. Bacon and Buerlin. LUCAS, Chamber tu tka north.,!.... the end ot the the will be discontinued. Has i year paper •502 Is Ihow rnliatiuK elsewhere in me just opened an Hoop Skirt and Corset uerol the new brick block, oru* r° fUm/.^d Single copies three cents. Stale, in i.d.lilisn Is the Ksuntira Portland, May 25,1863. tf Depot No. 145 Middle Milk Street. directly the The State I’uKsais every lliura- -and- Street Portland, facing ».r£,°f tow. Mam published the Toivuh may offer* Enquire at office or day morning,at $2.00 per Annum, ill advance; *2.26 ELEGANT OCEAN if within six months; and $2.60, il be STOCK INSURANCE CO.
    [Show full text]
  • National Statuary Hall Collection: Background and Legislative Options
    National Statuary Hall Collection: Background and Legislative Options Updated December 3, 2019 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R42812 National Statuary Hall Collection: Background and Legislative Options Summary The National Statuary Hall Collection, located in the U.S. Capitol, comprises 100 statues provided by individual states to honor persons notable for their historic renown or for distinguished services. The collection was authorized in 1864, at the same time that Congress redesignated the hall where the House of Representatives formerly met as National Statuary Hall. The first statue, depicting Nathanael Greene, was provided in 1870 by Rhode Island. The collection has consisted of 100 statues—two statues per state—since 2005, when New Mexico sent a statue of Po’pay. At various times, aesthetic and structural concerns necessitated the relocation of some statues throughout the Capitol. Today, some of the 100 individual statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection are located in the House and Senate wings of the Capitol, the Rotunda, the Crypt, and the Capitol Visitor Center. Legislation to increase the size of the National Statuary Hall Collection was introduced in several Congresses. These measures would permit states to furnish more than two statues or allow the District of Columbia and the U.S. territories to provide statues to the collection. None of these proposals were enacted. Should Congress choose to expand the number of statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection, the Joint Committee on the Library and the Architect of the Capitol (AOC) may need to address statue location to address aesthetic, structural, and safety concerns in National Statuary Hall, the Capitol Visitor Center, and other areas of the Capitol.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to State Statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection
    U.S. CAPITOL VISITOR CENTER GUide To STATe STATUes iN The NATioNAl STATUArY HAll CollecTioN CVC 19-107 Edition V Senator Mazie Hirono of Hawaii addresses a group of high school students gathered in front of the statue of King Kamehameha in the Capitol Visitor Center. TOM FONTANA U.S. CAPITOL VISITOR CENTER GUide To STATe STATUes iN The NATioNAl STATUArY HAll CollecTioN STATE PAGE STATE PAGE Alabama . 3 Montana . .28 Alaska . 4 Nebraska . .29 Arizona . .5 Nevada . 30 Arkansas . 6 New Hampshire . .31 California . .7 New Jersey . 32 Colorado . 8 New Mexico . 33 Connecticut . 9 New York . .34 Delaware . .10 North Carolina . 35 Florida . .11 North Dakota . .36 Georgia . 12 Ohio . 37 Hawaii . .13 Oklahoma . 38 Idaho . 14 Oregon . 39 Illinois . .15 Pennsylvania . 40 Indiana . 16 Rhode Island . 41 Iowa . .17 South Carolina . 42 Kansas . .18 South Dakota . .43 Kentucky . .19 Tennessee . 44 Louisiana . .20 Texas . 45 Maine . .21 Utah . 46 Maryland . .22 Vermont . .47 Massachusetts . .23 Virginia . 48 Michigan . .24 Washington . .49 Minnesota . 25 West Virginia . 50 Mississippi . 26 Wisconsin . 51 Missouri . .27 Wyoming . .52 Statue photography by Architect of the Capitol The Guide to State Statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection is available as a free mobile app via the iTunes app store or Google play. 2 GUIDE TO STATE STATUES IN THE NATIONAL STATUARY HALL COLLECTION U.S. CAPITOL VISITOR CENTER AlabaMa he National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol is comprised of statues donated by individual states to honor persons notable in their history. The entire collection now consists of 100 statues contributed by 50 states.
    [Show full text]
  • The Aesthetics of Islamic Architecture & the Exuberance of Mamluk Design
    The Aesthetics of Islamic Architecture & The Exuberance of Mamluk Design Tarek A. El-Akkad Dipòsit Legal: B. 17657-2013 ADVERTIMENT. La consulta d’aquesta tesi queda condicionada a l’acceptació de les següents condicions d'ús: La difusió d’aquesta tesi per mitjà del servei TDX (www.tesisenxarxa.net) ha estat autoritzada pels titulars dels drets de propietat intel·lectual únicament per a usos privats emmarcats en activitats d’investigació i docència. No s’autoritza la seva reproducció amb finalitats de lucre ni la seva difusió i posada a disposició des d’un lloc aliè al servei TDX. No s’autoritza la presentació del s eu contingut en una finestra o marc aliè a TDX (framing). Aquesta reserva de drets afecta tant al resum de presentació de la tesi com als seus continguts. En la utilització o cita de parts de la tesi és obligat indicar el nom de la persona autora. ADVERTENCIA. La consulta de esta tesis queda condicionada a la aceptación de las siguientes condiciones de uso: La difusión de esta tesis por medio del servicio TDR (www.tesisenred.net) ha sido autorizada por los titulares de los derechos de propiedad intelectual únicamente para usos privados enmarcados en actividades de investigación y docencia. No se autoriza su reproducción con finalidades de lucro ni su difusión y puesta a disposición desde un sitio ajeno al servicio TDR. No se autoriza la presentación de su contenido en una ventana o marco ajeno a TDR (framing). Esta reserva de derechos afecta tanto al resumen de presentación de la tesis como a sus contenidos.
    [Show full text]
  • Warpath, out to Grab Their First City Title VOLUME 30, NUMBER 13
    Negro parents, beginning today (Thursday), will be of Education to attend all-Negro schools. the hearing officers are Dr. John Richardson, MSU professor, Board officials believe it may take at least a week tdi1-., asked why they think their children should attend white and Paul Bryan, an attorney and former sessions court judge. When their children were turned back, almost a score hear all of the appeals. schools. of parents appealed to the Board of Education through Atty. Atty. Willis is representing all of the parents involved, Meanwhile the rejected pupils are attending all-Negro ; A. W. Willis, Jr. Mr. Willis attempted to enroll his son in He will conduct examinations and take testimony during the schools closest to their homes. .'j Persons due to testify are parents of 18 or more of the the first grade of a white school and is among those appeal­ hearings. Should the hearings result in the assignment of any of. , 50 Negro children who applied for enrollment in while , He said he thought parents asked him to file their ap­ ing. the Negro pupils to white schools it would mean that the peals because they knew he had become involved when he schools near their homes but were assigned by the Board pupil would shift from one school to another without missing The appeal hearings will be held at the Board and attempted to enroll his young son In the white school. any time in the classroom. ». Would ' J Warpath, Out To Grab is VOLUME 30, NUMBER 13 MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1961 PRICE TEN CENTS Their First City Title ' ‘J Coaches, Players Predict This Is The YearTo Win (Second In A Series) THIS Is the season the Doug­ lass Red Devils have apparent­ ly been waiting for for 19 years Popular Radio Personality - and Devil football followers seem confident it will turn out AA&g-gt Z .
    [Show full text]
  • Constantino Brumidi Artist of the Capitol
    Index Pages in bold refer to illustrations Academia Nacional de San Carlos de México, 50 Baumgras, Peter, 75, 93, 222 Accademia di San Luca, 3, 15, 25, 31, 50, 173 Beckert, Joseph, 127 Adoration of the Magi (Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul, Bellona, Roman Goddess of War, 82, 82, 160 Philadelphia), 159 Bemis, Emery, portrait of, 49 Adoration of the Shepherds (Cathedral of SS. Peter and Bemis, Susan Pickering, portrait of, 60n3 Paul, Philadelphia), 159 Bennitt family, 49 Agricola, Filippo, 15, 16–17 birds and animals, depictions of, 4, 4, 73, 75–78, 80–81, “Agriculture” (Apotheosis of Washington), 134 86n32, 96, 210 Agriculture Committee Room See House Appropriations Bisco, Camillo, 69, 75, 78, 100, 105, 222 Committee Room (H–144) Blair, Mrs. Elaine Hale, 33n12 An Allegory of the North and South (Terry), 162 The Bloody Massacre perpetrated in King Street Boston on American Party See Know-Nothing Party March 5th 1770, by a party of the 29th Reg. (en- Antonelli, Giacomo, Cardinal, 22 graving), 108 Apotheosis of Washington, ii, 1, 19, 47, 124–138, 124, The Boston Massacre, 1770, 105–106, 108 132, 142–143, 157, 172 Brewster, William, portrait of, 120 conservation of, 132, 181, 185, 186, 187–201, 192, Briggs, Robert, 66 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202 Brown, B. Gratz, 112 details of, 11, 124, 128, 129, 130, 132, 133, 134, Brown, Glenn, History of the United States Capitol, 86n22 135, 136, 137, 138, 140, 200, 201, 202 Brown, Henry Kirke, 92, 92, 95 iconography of, 148–149 Brown, Mrs. Ashmun, 122n4 studies for, 142–145, 142, 143, 144, 194–195 Brumidi, Clara Scarselli, 8 See also Capitol, United States, dome; Rotunda Brumidi, Constantino, 1, 63, 157, 170 The Apparition of Our Lord to St.
    [Show full text]
  • Capitol Buildings and Grounds
    CAPITOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS UNITED STATES CAPITOL OVERVIEW OF THE BUILDING AND ITS FUNCTION The United States Capitol is among the most architecturally impressive and symbolically important buildings in the world. It has housed the meeting chambers of the Senate and the House of Representatives for almost two centuries. Begun in 1793, the Capitol has been built, burnt, rebuilt, extended, and restored; today, it stands as a monument not only to its builders but also to the American people and their government. As the focal point of the government's Legislative Branch, the Capitol is the centerpiece of the Capitol Complex, which includes the six principal Congressional office buildings and three Library of Congress buildings constructed on Capitol Hill in the 19th and 20th centuries. In addition to its active use by Congress, the Capitol is a museum of American art and history. Each year, it is visited by an estimated seven to ten million people from around the world. A fine example of 19th-century neoclassical architecture, the Capitol combines function with aesthetics. Its designs derived from ancient Greece and Rome evoke the ideals that guided the Nation's founders as they framed their new republic. As the building was expanded from its original design, harmony with the existing portions was carefully maintained. Today, the Capitol covers a ground area of 175,170 square feet, or about 4 acres, and has a floor area of approximately 161¤2 acres. Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its greatest width, including approaches, is 350 feet. Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 287 feet 51¤2 inches; from the basement floor to the top of the dome is an ascent of 365 steps.
    [Show full text]
  • Puritan Acts and Monuments
    Clemson University TigerPrints Publications English 9-2017 Puritan Acts and Monuments Jonathan Beecher Field Clemson University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/english_pubs Recommended Citation Field, J. (2017). Puritan Acts and Monuments. In B. Traister (Ed.), American Literature and the New Puritan Studies (pp. 159-175). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316182253.010 This Book Contribution is brought to you for free and open access by the English at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in Publications by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected]. C:/ITOOLS/WMS/CUP-NEW/10569487/WORKINGFOLDER/TRAIS/9781107101883C10.3D 157 [157–175] 29.5.2017 9:10AM part iii Puritan Afterlives C:/ITOOLS/WMS/CUP-NEW/10569487/WORKINGFOLDER/TRAIS/9781107101883C10.3D 158 [157–175] 29.5.2017 9:10AM C:/ITOOLS/WMS/CUP-NEW/10569487/WORKINGFOLDER/TRAIS/9781107101883C10.3D 159 [157–175] 29.5.2017 9:10AM chapter 10 Puritan Acts and Monuments Jonathan Beecher Field What can we learn about Puritanism by looking at monuments to Puritans? For a town with a reputation for ancestor worship, Boston has surprisingly few memorials to its Puritan Founders. There is a statue of John Winthrop in the Back Bay and a statue of John Endicott in the Fenway. However, noted Puritan antagonists Anne Hutchinson and Mary Dyer both enjoy large memorials in prime locations on the grounds of the Massachusetts State House – impressive for women exiled and executed, respectively, by the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Hutchinson’s ally, Henry Vane, Jr., has a statue just inside the Boston Public Library.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Rebecca Racine September 20, 2010 E Pluribus Unum: The
    Rebecca Racine September 20, 2010 E Pluribus Unum: The People’s Capitol Building Almost everyone who visits the United States Capitol building today, first watches a short, thirteen minute film about the roots of America, the establishment of Congress, and the construction of the U.S. Capitol Building. The movie is titled E Pluribus Unum, meaning in Latin, “out of many one.” Emblazoned on the seal of the United States, E Pluribus Unum, is the foundation American government sits upon. It is a reminder that although Congressmen and Senators regularly inhabit the Capitol Building, it actually belongs to the people, the citizens of the United States of America. The Capitol tour seeks to reconnect the citizens to their building. According to the United States Census Bureau, the state of Illinois is home to approximately 12,910,409 people.1 It has nineteen congressional districts and two Senators.2 I was fortunate enough to intern for the current Senate Assistant Majority Leader, Senator Richard Durbin, who among other things, places an emphasis on the importance of his constituents. One of my primary duties as summer intern was to give tours of the Capitol Building to constituents. Any constituent can access the tour request form on the Senator’s website and request tours of the Capitol building, White House, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and the Library of Congress. While Senator Durbin’s office cannot always guarantee tours of the other sites, it is made a priority to give any constituent interested, a tour of the Capitol Building. 1 “Illinois QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau." State and County QuickFacts.
    [Show full text]
  • The Relative Positions of Those in Charge of the Capitol Extension Is
    THE WORK OF THOMAS U. WALTER, ARCHITECT The relative positions of those in charge of the Capitol extension occurred. When a new Administration (James Buchanan’s) came into is worthy of attention. Jefferson Davis, as chairman of the Committee office and John B. Floyd was made Secretary of War, the conflict on Public Buildings, first adopted the plans which were prepared by between the two in authority on the building became more bitter.32 In Robert Mills, using such features as the committee thought desirable in January, 1858, the controversy reached such a stage that the question the drawings secured by the competition of September, 1850 [Plates as to who should have charge of the drawings was submitted to the Sec- 141 to 148].31 President Fillmore fortunately took advantage of the retary of War. On October 4, 1858, Meigs obtained an order from the power vested in him by the act authorizing the Capitol extension, and Secretary directing Walter to give Captain Meigs “all drawings neces- appointed Thomas U. Walter Architect, and adopted the plans and ele- sary to carry on the building under your [his] charge.” In answer to this vations which Walter had prepared [Plates 151 to 166]. letter the Architect wrote to the Secretary saying: “I have reason to Judging from the repeated requests made by the Senate that the believe that the drawings you allude to in your order are such as are President should give them information as to the progress of the work, now required for the prosecution of the public work....This I under- as well as requests for information as to the arrangements of the plan stand to be the intention of your order, and this I am not only willing which he proposed, the Senate was not satisfied with the action of the but anxious to comply with.
    [Show full text]
  • Stalin Is Like a Fairytale Sycamore Tree — Stalin As a Symbol
    3 Stalin is like a fairytale sycamore tree — Stalin as a symbol Gratitude’s a dog’s disease. Iosif Stalin1 There was a fight in a line at the factory; people were hurt and a couple of policemen showed up. People just can’t seem to appreciate how happy their lives are. Andrei Stepanovich Arzhilovsky (ex-prisoner, executed by firing squad, 5 September 1937) 2 Depending on your point of view, Stalin may or not be like a fairytale sycamore tree, but this metaphor, from a panegyric by Kazakh poet Dzhambul, serves to illuminate a central tenet of this book: that ‘Stalin’, as he appeared in Soviet posters, was a construct. Indeed, we are all ‘constructs’ in terms of our perceived and performed identities in society. Stalin, however, is a construct produced by a large group of people for mass consumption with specific goals in mind. Stalin existed as a symbol for such concrete entities as the Bolshevik Party and the state, but also for more abstract concepts like communist progress, Bolshevik values and vision, and peace. The Party’s propaganda apparatus tightly controlled the use of his image and 1 Quoted in Simon Sebag Montefiore,Stalin: the court of the Red Tsar, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2003, p. 43. 2 ‘Diary of Andrei Stepanovich Arzhilovsky’, in Véronique Garros, Natalia Korenevskaya & Thomas Lahusen (eds), Intimacy and terror: Soviet diaries of the 1930s, New York, New Press, 1995, p. 150. 191 THE PERSONALITY CUlt OF StaliN IN SOVIET POSTERS, 1929–1953 his persona drew on emblems of leadership and sacred imagery from both the Russian and the European past, from newly forged Bolshevik symbols, and on universal archetypes.
    [Show full text]
  • Po\Vers Says He's U.S
    TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, I960 Averag* Dtily Net Press Run Tho Wesths; PAGE FOXJRTEEH ^anrlffBter lEvpttfns J|(ralh For tha Week Unded ratacMt « f D. S. Wesithw . iOM 4th, 1960 . Oaar and oool ’Dnifioii ss4d tbs growth rats la Law Im 66a. Robert laonard Bourret aon of tke SMB Is a proanlalng sign. 13,125 Auto Dealer L t WOOD GO. pleasant tesnperatwee Thursday. Lernmrd, J. Bourret 18 Taylor St, Sewer, Rules The new deslendtlp will go un­ Menber eC tha AwUt I About Town TalcottvlUe, has enlisted In the der the name o f Ted Trudon Inc., ICE PLANT High 89 to 86. ' ' U.S. Coast Guard for four years. BBfeaa af ^ MancheMter— A City o f Village Charm Will Build at Trudon said. The firm is mirrently 61 BISSELL ST. Membcn o f the exaouUve board He has reported to the Coast Head Agenda a^^ting receipt of bids for the ot th« Woman’ll Rapubllcan Club Guard Receiving Center at Cape cangtructlon of the salM building. Cubes-CnuheA-Blockt (CiaaMned, Advartlstog au Paga 18) o f Maaobaater wiU meat Thunday May, N> J.,‘ for recruit training. Town Directors tonight will con­ Vernon Line Perscmncl for the firm will be (TWENTY PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1960 PRICE FIVE CENTS Bourret is a I960 graduate of hired loci^ly, . TrudSn added. He YOL. L X m , NO. 271 at 3 pjn . at tha home of- the club sider how to assess costa of a paoaldent, Mra. Harlan Taylor, 30 Rockville High School, and was said the company hopes to be able formerly employed by the Con­ proposed sewage disposal plant .Negotiations are^tmderway for Harlan Rd.
    [Show full text]