Word: drawings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...waited, as I want to answer Mr. William L. Schwartz, whose letter appeared in your issue of June 27. Mr. Schwartz, the contents of TIME guarantees to its publishers the loyal support of its subscribers, program or no program. The high-quality of its program, "March of Time," should draw subscribers from those who have not been familiar with the calibre of magazine it publishes. Laughs are rare these days, but I really laughed when I read that your interest in the program was only because it appealed to your children. I think you are to be congratulated on having...
...women's singles championship, when Helen Wills Moody is playing in it, follows a set pattern. When Helen Jacobs is playing in it also, the pattern is usually symmetrical. At Wimbledon last week, on the side of the draw that contained Betty Nuthall and Mme René Mathieu, Helen Jacobs in the semi-finals met the French champion who had beaten Betty Nuthall the day before. She won her match, 7-5, 6-1. Suzanne Lenglen who had just flown over from Paris and who said she planned to play exhibition tennis this summer, watched Mrs. Moody...
...leading sporting experts. Caren's tabulation indicates that Schmeling totalled 262 blows landed as against his opponent's 256; for the great part of the fight Sharkey was retreating. His admission that the ruling could be given to either man means that the most Sharkey deserved was a draw. Although the majority of lesser known Boston sports writers conclude that the Czeckoslovak gob was the rightful victor, such judges as Tunney, Vidmer, McGeehan, to name a few, agree in the feeling of the German's manager that the decision was a "robbery...
Short of a military coup d'etat or acquiescence of Adolf Hitler in a coalition this prediction seemed flatly unfulfillable. Observers inclined, however, to see in General von Schleicher and Baron von Gayl precisely the pair who may be able to draw Adolf Hitler into a Junkers-Army-Fascist coalition, thus giving the Fatherland a fresh and iron front, potent in dealing with other nations...
...discipline and tap. He does not take his theories too seriously, does not take most "scientific" theories seriously at all. But he does not attack them as absolute nonsense, because he can ''conceive of no theory that is more than partly nonsensical." Even he must draw a "scientific" line somewhere. As reported in the New York World, in 1908, a party of detectives detailed to investigate a series of petty robberies in Pittsburgh, saw, early in the morning of July 26, a big black dog sauntering by. "Good morning!" said the dog. "He disappeared in a thin, greenish...