Word: chamberlaine
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DARTMOUTH Nairno Kiernan Kenny Chamberlain 27 25 15 17 Right Halfback Fullback Quarterback Left Halfback Hull Ronnett McCzay Ray Handrahan Camerer Camp 65 36 74 44 73 42 53 Right End Right Tackle Right Guard Center Left Guard Left Tackle Left End Dubiel Adlin Gaffacy Jones Kessler Burton Kelly 18 10 19 15 35 39 20 Left End Left Tackle Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle Right End Struck Eiledeau Hedblom Ford 11 12 16 24 Left Halfback Quarterback Fullback Right Halfback HARVARD
What is thinkable, and imminent, Chancellor Chamberlain added, is a Great British rearmament program, for which he must proceed to raise by loans, $500,000,000, according to City rumors...
...converted into Roosevelt Dollars, with little assurance of possible reconversion into gold and shipment back to Europe later (TIME, Oct. 7). Well might so mad a state of affairs make the Governor of the Bank of England howl, but the Chancellor of Britain's Exchequer is icy Neville Chamberlain, and last week this hook-nosed paragon of Conservatism favored the same London banquet with his stiff upper...
Finally, Conservative though he is, Chancellor Chamberlain took the stand that he must be left as free to extemporize and monkey with the pound as President Roosevelt is to monkey with the dollar. "If this country were to go back to the gold standard, it would mean we were no longer free to adapt our policy," Mr. Chamberlain suavely told the Mansion House banqueters. Earlier in the day, before the Lord Mayor's wines had mellowed his mood, the Chancellor had said harshly what he really meant, "even the most tentative approach to stabilization is quite unthinkable...
Mouthpiece of Japan's claims is the great Japanese Liberal, Count Michimasa Soyejima, insurance man and onetime Imperial Chamberlain, who claims that Benito Mussolini told him last February that Italy would withdraw in Japan's favor. A month later, at the Oslo, Norway meeting of the International Olympic Committee, the Italian delegates denied this, reasserted Italy's claim. Last week, with a war and the possibility of a League of Nations boycott on his hands, Benito Mussolini heard with dismay that nonLeague Member Japan might cooperate in a League boycott. Japanese goods looked far better last week...