Word: june
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Eight candidates were named last night to fill the three vacancies occurring in June on the Board of Directors of the Alumni Association, and a second list of eight was nominated to fill the three places left vacant on the Harvard Fund council...
...Gosplan has been under the disadvantage that the Political Police took away last summer and autumn not only its director, V. I. Mezhlauk, but also the other leading Plan officials, and they have not been heard of since. The June issue...
Planned Economy, an official Soviet organ which the state had scheduled for publication last June, finally came out last week. Accusing "Trotskyist wreckers and spies" of having "wormed their way" into highest officialdom in order to wreck planning at its source, Planned Economy declared: "Wreckers designated the construction of immense industrial enterprises at places far from raw materials, electric power and water resources. They hampered the development of districts possessing huge raw materials, resources and minerals, and they retarded the construction of important military enterprises...
...from becoming lost in its amusing elements. The latter are dangerously prominent, since the first act of the tragedy is pure comedy. Eileen Crowe is superb for the role of "Juno" Boyle, who receives her divinely regal name for the internal reason that everything in her life happened in June, but for dramatic reasons less fortuitous. F. J. McCormick has created his part of "Joxer" Daly, the fawning hanger-on and salve to the Captain's petty pride, and his rendition of the character is therefore perfect. All the lesser roles are filled with skill to be expected only...
...vast indifference to such carryings-on. Don't believe it. The reason for Harvard's unique social existence is that it lies but eight minutes by subway from Boston, a city with a notable absence of night-club life, a notable presence of society life. From October to June a stream of debuts and assemblies, as the "Friday Evenings" at the Hotel Somerset, keeps the average Harvard man busy and gay. Harvard men monopolize Boston parties. Therefore they can see no reason to start rival parties of their own in Cambridge...