swede deal - meaning and definition. What is swede deal
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What (who) is swede deal - definition

AMERICAN FOOTBALL PLAYER (1907–1985)
"Swede" Hanson; Tom "Swede" Hanson; Thomas "Swede" Hanson; Swede Hanson (football); Swede Hanson (American football)

swede deal      
Exclamation used when seeing or dealing with Swedes.
Adam Johnson: Hey are those swedish tourists?Dylan Little: Swede deal.
Deal or No Deal (German game show)         
GERMAN TELEVISION SERIES
Deal or No Deal (Deal or No Deal); Deal or No Deal (Germany)
Deal or No Deal is the German version of the international game show of Dutch origin of the same name. It was broadcast in Germany by broadcaster Sat.
New Deal         
  • Crowd at New York's American Union Bank during a [[bank run]] early in the Great Depression
  • National debt]] as [[gross national product]] climbs from 20% to 40% under President [[Herbert Hoover]]; levels off under Roosevelt; and soars during [[World War II]] from ''Historical States US'' (1976)
  • 1935 cartoon by [[Vaughn Shoemaker]] in which he parodied the New Deal as a card game with alphabetical agencies
  • [[Federal Emergency Relief Administration]] (FERA) camp for unemployed women in [[Maine]], 1934
  • FERA camp for unemployed black women, Atlanta, 1934
  • Roosevelt]]'s ebullient public personality, conveyed through his declaration that "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself" and his "fireside chats" on the radio did a great deal to help restore the nation's confidence
  • [[National Recovery Administration]] Blue Eagle
  • [[Works Progress Administration]] (WPA) poster promoting the [[LaGuardia Airport]] project (1937)
  • U.S. GDP]] annual pattern and long-term trend (1920–1940) in billions of constant dollars
  • Public Works Administration Project]] [[Bonneville Dam]]
  • US annual real GDP from 1910 to 1960, with the years of the Great Depression (1929–1939) highlighted
  • Social Security]] benefits
  • Surplus Commodities Program, 1936
  • Anti-relief protest sign near [[Davenport, Iowa]] by [[Arthur Rothstein]], 1940
  • date=March 18, 2009 }}, p. 17, column 127. Note that the graph only covers factory employment.</ref>
  • Unemployment rate in the United States]] from 1910–1960, with the years of the [[Great Depression]] (1929–1939) highlighted (accurate data begins in 1939)
  • The WPA hired unemployed teachers to provide free [[adult education]] programs
  • "Created Equal": Act I, Scene 3 of ''Spirit of 1776'', Boston ([[Federal Theatre Project]], 1935)
  • [[Francis Perkins]] looks on as Roosevelt signs the [[National Labor Relations Act]]
  • The federal government commissioned a series of public murals from the artists it employed: [[William Gropper]]'s ''Construction of a Dam'' (1939) is characteristic of much of the art of the 1930s, with workers seen in heroic poses, laboring in unison to complete a great public project
  • Female factory workers in 1942, [[Long Beach, California]]
  • WPA employed 2 to 3&nbsp;million unemployed at unskilled labor
ECONOMIC PROGRAMS OF U.S. PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
Hundred Days Congress; The new deal; New deal; Roosevelt's New Deal; First New Deal; The New Deal; New Deal's; EMIC (Emergency Maternity and Infant Care Program); New Deal Plan; New Deal Democrats; Criticism of the New Deal; Lanham Act of 1940; Emergency Maternity and Infant Care Program
The New Deal was a series of programs, public work projects, financial reforms, and regulations enacted by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the United States between 1933 and 1939.

Wikipedia

Tom Hanson (American football)

Thomas Tucker "Swede" Hanson (November 10, 1907 – August 5, 1970) was an American football halfback in the National Football League mainly for the Philadelphia Eagles, for whom he caught the first touchdown in franchise history. He played college football at Temple University.