Abstract

Issues and Men

Villard, Oswald Garrison | July 26, 1933 issue

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The article presents information on various political developments. Never in the history of the American press have editors been called upon to pass as many or more momentous judgments as they have since March 4 last. Measures of the utmost importance have been introduced, reported, and jammed through the U.S. Congress with such speed that they have become the law of the land before editors of weeklies had time to comment upon them. The most involved and delicate questions and proposals have come up for comment overnight, usually heralded by days of Utterly contradictory forecasts as to what U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt would or would not do.

See Also:

POLITICAL development; LAW; EDITORS; PRESS; UNITED States. Congress; UNITED States
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