Word: clint
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Meanwhile Clint Frank's Elis were showing considerable power. The Bulldogs rolled over Princeton 26 to 0 on November 13 and came into the "Harvard game" on November 20 unbeaten that year, undefeated by the Crimson in three years, and favorites to take the Ivy League Championship. But Harlow's team rallied in the rain and snow to win, 13 to 6, winding up with a relatively good record for Crimson elevens--five wins, two defeats...
Witnessing the workout was Bob Green, Varsity end from 1936 to 1938 and Crimson captain in his Senior year. As a member of the '37 team, which Harlow rates as one of his most successful, Green enjoyed the distinction of beating Yale and Clint Frank...
...Clint Anderson had been guilty of bad team-play; he had also poured cold water on the generous impulse of many a U.S. citizen. Nevertheless, there was a solid nut of truth in what he had said. Trying to save grain by starting with the consumer was like trying to lower prices through such retail price-cutting schemes as the ill-fated Newburyport plan (TIME, May 5). The only sensible place to start saving grain was where it came from-on the nation's farms...
...Clint Anderson also wants to change things so that the Government will not have to buy up parity crops until prices have fallen to between 60% and 75% of parity (the present law requires purchase at 90%). To handle such crop surpluses he suggested reviving such New Deal measures as the food-stamp plan and the free school lunches, which had worked well. In short, Secretary Anderson, while making sure the farmers know they have a friend in the White House, is also trying to get around some of the pitfalls of the present program...
...lowering of the support level as well as the food-stamp plan. Ed O'Neal, who would rather keep prices up by planned scarcity, said that the federation is "profoundly opposed to feeding surplus food to low-income groups" except as a "desperate measure." It looked as if Clint Anderson's program would get some strong hoeing in Congress before it grows into anything worthwhile...