Talk:Anton Cermak: Difference between revisions
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== Member, Medinah Country Club == |
== Member, Medinah Country Club == |
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Unsure how/where to include this. In [[Medinah_Country_Club | Medinah]] CC's archives is a brochure tha features an ad from Cermak: "Counting the covers, the pamphlet is composed of twenty-four pages.... Many pages are multiple black and white block style local adverts...and there is a super "A.J. Cermak - Democratic Candidate - United States Senator From Illinois - Member Medinah Country Club" ad." |
Unsure how/where to include this. In [[Medinah_Country_Club | Medinah]] CC's archives is a brochure tha features an ad from Cermak: "Counting the covers, the pamphlet is composed of twenty-four pages.... Many pages are multiple black and white block style local adverts...and there is a super "A.J. Cermak - Democratic Candidate - United States Senator From Illinois - Member Medinah Country Club" ad."--[[User:Robertkeller|Robertkeller]] 21:39, 7 September 2007 (UTC) |
Revision as of 21:39, 7 September 2007
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No comment at all about his death? From the FDR article:
In Miami an unemployed bricklayer called Joseph Zangara fired five shots at Roosevelt, missing him but killing the Mayor of Chicago, Anton Cermak. Zangara, who was later executed, said he had shot at Roosevelt because "the capitalists killed my life." --Tony Hecht 01:18, 1 May 2005 (UTC)
"and Thompson's slur largely backfired. (Making a New Deal, p. 256)" WHAT page? Of which book? Any copyright infringement?
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A reader sent this to info-en@wikimedia.org: "In all of my readings, including newspaper clippings from 1933, online researches and books, I've found that Cermak was not riding in the car with FDR but sitting in the grandstand. When the car came to a stop for FDR to speak, FDR saw Cermak in the stands & motioned for him to come down, as he did." The Uninvited Co., Inc. 21:46, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
"The greatest political figure"
Cermak used his last breath to call the President-elect a M***er F***er to his face. Given Cermak's rough and tumble street origins, this is totally plausible. It is also the reason that Anton Cermak is considered by many to be the greatest political figure the United States has produced since the Civil War.
Wait... he's considered the greatest political figure since the Civil War because he cursed the U.S. president with his dying breath? Surely this is a case of poor wording. —LonelyPilgrim 22:57, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
- A case of poor wording? No, I suspect it is a facetious dig at FDR, given the fairly clear ideological cant of the editor who added this. Removed. 67.39.188.207 21:16, 11 April 2006 (UTC)
Unless there is some sort of documentation of of the "MF" reference, I think it should be deleted. And I will, unless someone has something else to say. Joegoodfriend 17 May 2006
- No, it definitely needs to stay. I think it was written very well and it doesnt state it as af fact it just says allegedly. I didnt even write it.
Jerry Jones 17:14, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
- I take your point, but I question the idea that this article should largely be about one author's uncorraborated story about historical figures calling each other dirty names. I'm can't find any other author discussing this incident in this way. I think the article needs a rewrite. Joegoodfriend 17 May 2006 (UTC)
- Not sure why an apocryphal story, no matter how well or poorly written, belongs here. Shsilver 17:28, 18 May 2006 (UTC)
I have made significant changes to this article including: 1. Factual accuracy and details of the assassination, especially on the unproven allegations that Roosevelt was not the intended target. 2. I have curtailed the "Len O'Connor" anecdote to a single paragraph. This strange, uncorraborated story, was also hopelessly POV. For instance, it contained the sentence, "With his tail between his legs, Cermak approached FDR and kissed the ring." Also, the story had been edited in ways that caused it to make no sense (not that it made sense in the first place). Joegoodfriend 06 June 2006 (UTC)
Member, Medinah Country Club
Unsure how/where to include this. In Medinah CC's archives is a brochure tha features an ad from Cermak: "Counting the covers, the pamphlet is composed of twenty-four pages.... Many pages are multiple black and white block style local adverts...and there is a super "A.J. Cermak - Democratic Candidate - United States Senator From Illinois - Member Medinah Country Club" ad."--Robertkeller 21:39, 7 September 2007 (UTC)
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