Word: health
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...have been obtained to supply the wants of all the students--though depending on a fairy godfather to furnish the capital-points in the right direction. For if the Harvard Law students of today are to stand the strain of holding down, the supreme court benches of tomorrow, their health in the formative years must be more carefully guarded...
With the passing of Mr. Rogers, a colorful figure departs from the gala Harvard commencement picture. He attended practically every graduation exercises, except when in ill health, and his cane and white beard were familiar June sights as he proudly led the alumni procession on such occasions. Only by a scant day did he outlive John T. Morse, '60, aged 97, second oldest alumnus, who died Saturday at his home in Needham. Thus the honor position in the procession now passes to John Kittredge Browne, '69, of Chicago. But moderate Mr. Rogers will not soon be forgotten as typifying...
...under the Social Security Act, retirement age is 65. Railroaders would retire at any time after 30 years' service if physically or mentally disabled, or if in good health and having 30 years' service as early as 60 (sacrificing one-fifteenth of their pension for each year they retire before 65). Or they could even continue working after...
...assassination, where it is a solution at all, is a medieval one. Mr. Roosevelt would not have his Beckets on the Supreme Court assassinated. Good humanitarian that he is, he only wants to separate the question of constitutional interpretation from the irrelevant question of Mr. Justice McReynold's good health. After all, it is only the twisted decisions of a few justices that have established this unnatural connection between the meaning of the Constitution and their continued existence. Unless Mr. Roosevelt can somehow circumvent the consequences of the social prepossessions of several justices, he is forced to wait unhappily...
Using every appeal from health & sanitation to defense of the U. S. laboring man, Mr. Babst has carried his case to the public in speech, statement, advertising and labeling. In his brief to his stock-holders last week he argued principally on the ground of national safety. "In spite of war or drought, civil disturbance or disaster, the home refineries always have been able to obtain raw sugar in some quarter of the globe out of which to make the refined sugar requirements of the Nation," rumbled Mr. Babst...