Word: news
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Last week the following were news...
...independent steelmakers were fired with a wrath born of isolation. Big Steel and the little fellows had later yielded recognition to the C.I. O. For the first time since the schism was opened ast spring when U.S. Steel's President William Adolf Irvin telephoned his competitors the incredible news, the two factions sat down in the same room...
...William Splawn, nor of its highly reputed author. An expert on utility holding companies, deliberate, bespectacled Commissioner Splawn also did the spadework that resulted in the Federal Communications Commission investigation of American Telephone & Telegraph (TIME, April 16, 1934). On Mr. Young's admission of ignorance and on the news that Alleghany was marked for dissolution, Alleghany stock nose-dived from...
...limited incomes. Elsewhere African Methodists (Albany, N. Y.), United Lutherans (Manhattan), United Presbyterians (Chicago), Catho lic Daughters of America (Elmira, N. Y.), Knights of Columbus (Geneva, N. Y.), members of a Movement for World Christianity (Rochester, N. Y.), a Fellowship of Southern Churchmen (Nashville, Tenn.) deliberated, prayed, resolved. Most news worthy conventions of the week...
...more sacred it would be difficult to say, but it would be harder to imagine England without its Royal Family than the U. S. without its Constitution. Last week, as in every week since President Roosevelt announced his intention of "revivifying" the Supreme Court, the Constitution was front-page news. In Washington and Philadelphia publicity-wise politicians were making capital of the grand old document's 150th anniversary. And last week appeared a timely, eminently readable history of the U. S. Constitution to show thoughtful readers what lay back of the headlines...