Word: lowers
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...necessity for rebuilding Japanese cities has tended to impart strength to material prices, and to stave off prospects for lower prices here for another year. In consequence, American builders are now going ahead again, instead of waiting for lower costs. Even the conservative investor is not so inclined to hesitate over present expensive construction, after realizing the prospective Japanese demand for building materials...
...Classics and Philosophy Widener 576 44 Shepard St. Classics and Fine Arts Widener 576 44 Shepard St. Classics and Economics Widener 576 44 Shepard St. Classics and Government Widener 576 44 Shepard St. Classics and History Widener 576 44 Shepard St. Comparative Literature Warren House 8 Hilliard St. Economics Lower Reading Rm. Widener 772 Education Lawrence 5 Lawrence 5 Engineering Sciences Pierce 223 Pierce 223 English Warren House Warren House The Fine Arts Sever 25 Sever 25 French and Other Romance Languages and Literatures Widener Y Widener Y Geology Geol. Mus. 12 Geol. Mus. 12 Geology and Geography Geol...
...Even as Vice President he refused to travel in a Pullman drawing room. ' A berth, upper or lower, is good enough for me,' he would say. ' The funds of the party are sacred...
...Santa Catalina and San Clemente islands, off the coast near Los Angeles, and at San Diego, Ensenada, Mexico and other Lower California posts, the sky was obscured by heavy clouds practically throughout the eclipse. At Los Angeles the clouds parted just long enough for the watching thousands to see a thin crescent of shadow on the disk in the early phase. At Mexico City the clouds were more polite, and a good view was obtained, though as the Mexican capital was just outside the belt of totality, with an obscuration of 99.4%, none of the major expeditions had stationed themselves...
...observation were possible. Army and Navy aviators, from their headquarters at Rockwell Field, San Diego, mounted from 16,000 to 20,000 feet, above the clouds and fog, flew out over the ocean, snapped the eclipse at 80-mile intervals previously mapped out between Santa Barbara and San Lower California. Each plane was manned by a pilot and a photographer. Lieut. John Macready, transcontinental non-stop flyer, and George Stephens, the Army's crack photographer, ran into a heavy rainstorm and secured nothing. But aviators from the battle fleet squadrons, under command of Captain V. Marshall, secured satisfactory photographs...