Word: june
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Pressed for an opinion on next Fall's prospects, Harlow's only comment was, "We don't know how the June examinations will affect our playing personnel, but if we have everybody available, we should start with a better team than we did a year ago. We realize that our major opponents are not standing still. We expect all of them to be as strong, or stronger...
...next two months it will be hard to find many an important doctor in his office. He will very likely be busy with the perennial series of medical conventions which ends with the American Medical Association at Atlantic City in mid-June, and which began last week with the American College of Physicians in St. Louis, the American Physiological Society in Memphis, the American Physical Education Association in Manhattan. Speakers produced a broad miscellany of useful information to add to the sum of man's knowledge about his mortal envelope. Items: Physicians...
...length. Little M. I. T., which lacks the facilities of its two rivals, beat Princeton's 150-lb. boat by three feet. Crew critics agreed that Coach Bolles, whom Harvard hired after his Washington freshmen beat five other freshmen crews at the Poughkeepsie Regatta last June, had brought Washington efficiency to Harvard's boat in record time, anticipated an even livelier rivalry than usual this June at New London when Coach Bolles's boat meets Yale's-coached by Washington-trained Ed Leader...
...display of sheer innocence into her friends instead of his. Actor MacKenna (Merrily We Roll Along, Accent on Youth) has been playing erring dramatists so long he should be able to present the required blend of boyish and goatish behavior even though in the throes of somnambulism. Linda Watkins (June Moon) is equally adept at impersonating the girl whose shrewdness is masked by wide-open eyes and naive questions. Between them, they should manage to keep Penny Wise on the boards well into the peony season...
FORTUNE found that the real story dates back to last June, when Steelman Taylor sailed for Europe "in a peculiarly philosophic mood." Just before he sailed he had opposed, though not strongly enough to stop it, the manifesto published in paid advertisements last summer by the American Iron & Steel Institute declaring war on John L. Lewis. It was evident to Mr. Taylor that Steel's traditional "blood and brimstone" labor policies were thoroughly outmoded. Yet "to give in to Labor spinelessly meant to lose control over the business one had been hired to manage. To fight Labor adamantly meant...