Word: contractions
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Lewis tried to put the best face he could on the contract with an optimistic declaration thai: "it preserves the current wage structure." But he devoted most of his statement to his old line of buttering up Steelman Taylor. Said Laborman Lewis: "The fact that our minds were able to meet on questions of principle and policy is a tribute to Mr. Taylor not only as a leader of industry but as an American devoted to the furtherance of ration,: relationships and national stability...
...women the vote, did cancel at one stroke the network of laws under which a French wife has been almost as much under her husband's authority as though she were a minor child, unable to sign a check without his countersignature, helpless to make a will or contract without his express approval, unable to leave France or appear on the stage in France should he forbid...
...motor industry and rumor placed dozens of coaches-from Harvard's Dick Harlow to City College's Benny Friedman-in his shoes, Michigan authorities set their hearts on Herbert Orrin ("Fritz") Crisler. But Coach Crisler was snugly ensconced at Princeton; his $7,000-a-year contract had two more years to run. It would take more than a coaching job to pry him away, particularly...
...Hook's remarks came an event which, on the surface, seemed to indicate a more sympathetic attitude of business toward Congress. This was a $4-a-ton cut in the price of cold rolled steel sheets, on the same day that U. S. Steel Corp. signed a new contract with Labor maintaining wages at the same level as before Only last month President Benjamin Franklin Fairless of U. S. Steel wrote the Senate Committee to Investigate Unemployment & Relief that "it is clear that prices cannot be reduced without corresponding reduction in costs, of which wages are the most important...
Last year another potent Governmental bureau, the Treasury Department, was mightily annoyed to discover that the 14 companies seeking its $2,800,000 tire & tube contracts offered practically identical bids. Threatening to investigate the possibility of collusion,* the Treasury gave a $1,000,000 contract to Sears, Roebuck, which had not bid but whose retail prices were lower even though it bought its tires wholesale from one of the original bidders (TIME...