Abstract

Johnson for President?

Anderson, Paul Y. | February 3, 1932 issue

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The U.S. Presidential nominee Hiram Johnson's investigation of foreign loans and the resulting predicament of the State Department continue to occupy the center of the capital stage. Without a single assistant, and despite much furtive obstruction, the doughty Johnson has uncovered a series of financial and political scandals that are attracting almost as much public interest as those which attended the oil leases. Hiram's spectacular success with the investigation is not diminishing his availability as an opponent of the U.S. President Herbert Hoover for the Presidential nomination.

See Also:

JOHNSON, Hiram, 1866-1945; HOOVER, Herbert, 1874-1964; PRESIDENTIAL candidates; PRESIDENTS -- Election; PRESIDENTS -- United States; UNITED States
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