Word: feared
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Aboard the S. S. Ancon from Panama, where a drinking spree had placed him in hospital, arrived in Manhattan last week James Thomas ("Tom Tom") Heflin Jr., 28, son of the resounding Alabama Senator who professes mortally to hate and fear alcohol and the Pope of Rome. With the young Heflin was Senator Tom Connally of Texas. Obviously befuddled by the Prohibition question, Junior Heflin gabbled convivially with ship newsgatherers until Senator Connally took him to his cabin and locked him in. Upon the pier Junior Heflin announced: "I want to see Al Smith. My father...
Candidates for the debate will speak for five minutes on the subject: "Resolved, That as opposed to Mr. Stegfried's opinion, French industry may adopt American methods of mass production without fear of compromising its individualistic advantages." Six men will be chosen who will speak in the finals on May 2 in Paine Hall. The judges tonight will be Professor F. C. Packard Jr. '20, Professor R. L. Hawkins '03, and Dr. A. C. Sprague...
...more even and less impetuous flow, the Bolshevists have maintained their control in Russia for eleven years, and bid fair to continue as many more. Whether Communism has held its own along with the Bolshevist party is a much more doubtful question, and those capitalists who had most to fear from it and were most active in their attacks against it, are already beginning to hope that by a gradual process of change Russia will slip back to capitalism and with it, the brotherhood of nations. The New Economic Policy, started in 1923 was the first definite indication of this...
These preliminaries are open to all undergraduates. Candidates will speak in English for five minutes on the proposition: "Resolved, That, as opposed to Mr. Siegfried's opinion, French industry may adopt American methods of mass production without fear of compromising its individualistic advantages...
...silk makers fear to risk anti-trust proceedings by agreements to restrict production, and cannot agree among themselves on tariff protection, the overproduction problem seems far from a solution. Hosiery manufacturers (who consume about 50% of silk used in the U. S.) have accumulated enough silk to last for some months, and are not greatly in the market at present prices...