Word: crucially
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...basketball game is a most crucial contest of the League with second place in the offing for the winner. Despite its pairs of defeats from Penn and Dartmouth, the Crimson five showed improved play with the Lions, and they should be definately in the running against the up-and-coming Elis. That Columbia game saw the Harvard team displaying some of the best play we have seen in the Indoor Athletic Building since the 38-36 Pennsylvania thriller, and the same brand of play was continued as the five swamped the Jumbos at Medford Thursday. The second game...
...last home appearance before the crucial meet with Yale March 13, the undefeated Varsity swimming team will go after its tenth straight win when it meets the University of Pennsylvania at the Indoor Athletic Building tonight...
...their crucial meet with Virginia draws nearer hourly, the boxing room high up in the Indoor Athletic Building is a hive of activity; for on Saturday the team of Coach Henry Lamar and Captain Pete Olney will face Virginia down in Charlottesville. This meet has special interest for Harvard, for this year is the last in which Harvard will take part in intercollegiate competition, and unless the Athletic Council changes its mind, this is the last meet in which a Crimson team will take part...
...message, that he would be empowered to appoint not more than 50 new judges to duplicate those who are now 70 and have been ten years on the bench. Not stated by the President to the press, and in the draft bill masterfully underemphasized, was the specific, final, crucial point of the entire performance: a proposal to swell the Supreme Court-should septuagenarians decline to retire-from nine to 15 members, an increase of two Justices larger than the confirmed anti-New Deal element of the present Court...
...President Andrew Jackson, who resented the Court as hotly as Thomas Jefferson had and Franklin Roosevelt does, struck at the foundation of its power by urging repeal of a crucial section of the Judiciary Act of 1789. Unsuccessful, and only partly mollified as death made vacancies for Democrats, the hard-bitten old Indian fighter crystallized his view of the Supreme Court in a traditional comment on the decision which first gave Indians their legal status as government wards, "John Marshall has made his decision," Jackson roared, "Now let him enforce...