Word: outlook
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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According to the present outlook, the first line will be composed of Hasler and Beale, at left wing and center respectively, retaining the positions they held on the third string line of last year's Varsity squad. With them at right wing will be Dunbar Holmes '35, a newcomer to Varsity ranks. As second string line it appears that Coach Stubbs will select William A. Lincoln '35, third string wing last year, Samuel R. Callaway '36, and Arthur F. Duffey, Jr. '36, both of whom had experience on the Freshman team last year...
...family whenever TIME has been on the air. It takes something very important to make us miss the program. TIME is also our regular weekly newsmagazine by unanimous vote of the whole family, old and young. We value your publication not only for its brilliant readability, correctness and broad outlook on national and world affairs but for its impartial selection and statement of all significant news. . . . Tonight we were disappointed to see TIME used as a bait for a very partial and one-sided discussion in an after-program. As you know, the Administration program has about crowded adverse discussion...
...Franklin Roosevelt last year had the two oldtime friends met socially. Happy at the railroad station, he told reporters inquiring about his health that he felt "like a whistle." A White House invitation brought John J. Raskob and Editor Smith, who has sharply criticized the Administration in his New Outlook, to the executive mansion for tea. There they met U. S. Ambassador-at-Large Davis, who had come to Washington to talk disarmament with the President, Mrs. Dall and her "Sistie" and "Buzzie." Greeted by the President as "Al," Editor Smith was in high spirits. He stalked about, gesticulating like...
...outlook is fairly bright in spite of the fact that five of the men who faced Yale last winter are lost by graduation. There are six others who played in the Yale series who are coming back. Besides this some sophomores will report...
Early this year when Atlas Tack was kicking around the New York Stock Exchange between $1.50 and $2 a share, a group including Frank Aloysius Tichenor, publisher of Alfred Emanuel Smith's New Outlook, Francis Dawson Gallatin, Manhattan lawyer, George Woodruff, treasurer of A Century of Progress, thought they saw possibilities in the little $1,300,000 company. By last month these gentlemen were in control and with some friends were duly elected to the board. By last week when Messrs. Roosevelt & Sargent became tackmen, Atlas stock was selling for $28.50 a share-its high for the year...