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"EVERY MAN A KING" 1. February 23, 1934. (Radio Address) "IT IS NECESSARY TO SCALE DOWN THE BIG FORTUNES" Is that a right of life, when the young chil dren of this country are being reared into a sphere which is more owned by 12 men than it is by 120 million people?
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“every man a king, BUT NO ONE WEARS A CROWN” Mr. John H. Overton, our keynote orator, described the opposition conclave as a “rump convention,” wherein the dukes, earls and lords of the State’s politics had gathered to witness the heralded birth of a new Crown Prince to preside over the destinies of the commonwealth.
HUEY LONG, "Every Man a King" (1934) years into the New Deal, recovery still seemed distant for many Americans. Their contin- despair buoyed the political ambitions of Democratic senator Huey Long from Louisiana. A brilliant orator and political operator, Long took advantage of the new popularity of radio to
Robert Penn Warren’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “All The King’s Men” (1946) later became a 14949 Oscar-winning film and was widely perceived as a thinly veiled portrayal of Huey Long. Christopher H. Sterling served on the faculty of George Washington University for over three decades.
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Mar 12, 2020 · Long, Huey Pierce -- Louisiana -- Politics, Politics and government, Louisiana -- Politics and government -- 1865-1950, Louisiana. Publisher. New Orleans, La., National Book Co. Collection. marygrovecollege; internetarchivebooks; americana; printdisabled. Contributor.
Classic Senate Speeches. Huey Long. Every Man a King. February 23, 1934. Adapting his rhetoric to the techniques of broadcasting, Louisiana senator Huey P. Long used a nationwide radio address to spread his ideas about the redistribution of wealth.