Word: expected
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Foolish Elis expect win Burton the other Hand Sage knows they will be Rankin the Stadium. Kelley will be Shaun of his glory, Moseley because Kelly Wilson show himself Amos twice as good. Harvard will get Palm of victory, and when they are Dunn giving the Snavely Yale boys the Dickens, it will be Curtins for the Blue hopes all Wright. Harvard will gain Miles of ground, but Blue will have to live on Love until they get back to their own Pond. Au revoir but not goodbye to faithful readers. Harvard 13, Yale 7; Princeton 20, Dartmouth 13; Commonwealth...
With the issuance of a call for Freshman candidates, Harvard's three shooting units, the Rifle Club, the Pistol Club, and the Naval Science rifle team, were peppering the target end of their Memorial Hall range at full blast early this week, and expect to announce their respective schedules and have their teams picked by competition shortly...
...sanctions; no more Czechoslovak coal will be shipped to Italy. Rushing off 300 carloads to Italy last week, Czechoslovaks eased their pricking consciences by officially designating each of the 300 carloads of coal as a "sample." Why they should send samples to a nation to which they do not expect to sell more coal was a question Czechoslovaks answered with bland shrugs...
Aside from Actor Laughton's performance, Mutiny on the Bounty is all that anyone would have any right to expect. The three-volume epic of Mutiny on the Bounty, Men Against the Sea and Pitcairn's Island (TIME. Oct. 17, 1932; Jan. 15, 1934; Nov. 5, 1934), written from and for an amazing record, was not designed for neat conversion into a scenario. Despite the efforts of Producer Irving Thalberg, Director Frank Lloyd, three scenarists and $2,000,000 to give it balance, polish and direction, the picture lacks all three. There are intervals when the two hours...
...embracing in scope, and affects people in ways other than their productive capacities. Thus the AAA, which by its nature must be relatively static, and based on supposed fixities of population, among other things, runs afoul the tendency of urban unemployed to flock to rural areas where they expect to make some sort of living. Where then is the solution unless the government buys up "surplus" land...