Word: monday
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Debaters against Radcliffe on Monday, November 8, will be Phil G. Neal '40 and John A. Moore '38 with Cecil D. Elfenbein '38, as alternate. Harvard will have the affirmative there on the question, "Resolved: That the Neutrality Act should be immediately applied in the Sino-Japanese situation...
...many people know how much work and planning go into the production of a daily paper? Freshmen who'd like to find out are invited down to open night on Thursday, Friday or Monday nights any time between 8:30 and 10 o'clock...
John K. Fairbank '39, instructor in History, will speak on the question, "Should the U. S. Help England in China?" in the fifth of The Harvard Guardian's fall series of fifteen-minute radio programs over Station WAAB and the Colonial network at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, November 1. Fairbank will review the background of the present situation in the Far East and discuss America's position and interests...
...claim to being the most startling single day in stockmarket history since famed Oct. 29, 1929. Prices ended about where they started, but in between they went through an excursion similar to Dr. Beebe's junkets to the bottom of the sea in a bathysphere. Prices on Monday had fallen in the worst break of the current decline and everyone anticipated that opening prices Tuesday would be down as a result of widespread margin calls...
What actually happened is classically exemplified by the stock of Nash-Kelvinator Co. Monday it closed at $10.50. Opening sale Tuesday was at $5. At close it was back to $9.63. Chrysler bounced down to $52.50, back to $61; American Telephone & Telegraph to $140, back to $147; General Motors to $31.25, back to $38.25. On massed selling orders American Rolling Mill opened at $15.50 (down $4.75), closed back at $20.25. Trading volume in the first two hours was 3,890,000 shares, by day's close had reached 7,287,080, greatest since 1933. Fluctuations were the widest since...