Word: ind
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...developments in the Kipke story which seemed enough to cause it to obliterate all other news from U. S. sports pages. In New Haven, Malcolm Farmer announced that the Yale Athletic Association would not announce the name of next year's coach until Feb ruary. In South Bend, Ind., where he was reported to be conferring with "representatives of Yale," famed Coach Kipke made one more statement: "I am not considering any offer at Yale. I do not know where all the stories come from...
...with no very definite rule for weighing the importance of the opinion of the legislature. It should be added, however, that the Court has refused to sustain a law on the ground that the emergency which made it constitutional had ceased to exist. (See Wolff v. Court of Ind. Relations, 262 U.S., 522 et alia...
Like Editor Henry Louis Mencken who announced his retirement from the American Mercury last October, Ed Howe was perpetually disgruntled. Born in Treaty, Ind., educated in public schools until he went into a print shop at 12, he began the expression of his general dissatisfaction in 1877 when he founded the Atchison Globe. After a day's work in the Globe office, starting at 7 o'clock in the morning and ending at 4 o'clock when the paper was "put to bed," Editor Howe spent his evenings writing a novel which he called The Story...
...swung the apple & pear-wine deal was Raymond Clendenin Miller of AAA. A native of Vincennes, Ind., Mr. Miller was preparing for his M. A. examinations at Catholic University when the War broke out. By the time his classmates were getting themselves fitted for graduating gowns, Mr. Miller was wearing an infantry lieutenant's uniform. He served with the 89th Division in France, later with the 160th U. S. Infantry Brigade. Back in Washington after the War, he operated three small cinema houses while studying for the foreign service at Georgetown...
...Fentress and his attorneys but denied them further fees, blazing: "As it was conducted in 1929 the investment trust was nothing but a glorified gambling institution. . . ." ¶ Samuel Insull Jr. and six other past or present directors of Northern Indiana Public Service Co. were indicted in Crown Point, Ind. for embezzlement, larceny and conspiracy to commit a felony. The indictments were not divulged, but it was understood that Insull Jr. and his associates were charged with looting Northern Indiana's treasury to shore up the crumbling walls of the Insull holding companies. This particular Insull echo resulted from...