Word: augusts
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...fill the three vacancies on the House committee, it was announced last night by John M. Lockwood '34, chairman. The other nominees were: Juniors: Frank P. Bland, Irving S. Chenoweth, Stanley G. Kellogg, and James A. Wolff; Sophomores, Thomas A. Bittenbender, William W. Gallagher, Jr., Benjamin H. Hallowell, August C. Helmholtz, 2nd, and John R. Pappenheimer...
...will be elected from the following list of Juniors: Frank P. Bland '35, Dorilio C. Braggietti '35, Irving S. Chenoweth '35, Stanley G. Kellegg '35, James A. Wolff '35. One from the Sophomores: Thomas A. Bittenbender '36, John Derman '36, William W. Gallagher, Jr. '36, Benjamin H. Hallowell '36, August C. Helmholtz, 2nd., '36, and John R. Pappenhelmer. The elections will be carried out by printed ballot today and Wednesday...
...stopped drinking, promptly came up again in 1928. He declined the job of managing the Boston Braves, lest it spoil his hitting. Said Maranville last week: ''I'm probably lucky I did not break my neck. . . . Look for me in the Braves' lineup by August...
...seventh consecutive week carloading ran ahead not only of 1933 but also of 1932. Output of bituminous coal, prime source of U. S. power, exceeded the levels of the winter of 1929-30 for the first time. Lumber production was at the highest volume since last August. Steel operations, now 47% of capacity, were expected to approach 55% in April. The burlap trade predicted the first active spring since 1928. It was estimated that the pick-up in automobile production had bettered the status of 10,000,000 workers in 20 major industries...
...When, in August 1932, Frank Aloysius Tichenor hired Alfred Emanuel Smith at a fancy figure to edit his New Outlook, it was not because he valued Citizen Smith's untested talents as a journalist, but because he knew that anything Al Smith said or wrote would be important news. For a year and a half, the most important news that Editor Smith made was criticism of the Roosevelt Administration. In the first issue of the New Outlook, he called the Forgotten Man a myth (TIME, Oct. 10, 1932). In May last year he urged caution about inflation. In June...