Word: predictions
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...preparation for their first game, which comes but two weeks away with Boston University, the University courtmen have been working out daily in the Indoor Athletic Building under the direction of Coach Ed Wachter. At this early date it is hard to predict much about the team, but there is a good nucleus of men from last year's squad with which Wachter can work, and he expects to have the usual strong team this year which he has had in former seasons...
...these moves Congressional leaders have made only a negative response, standing pat against either reduction or moratorium. Their stubbornness is softened only by Borah's offer to trade debt reduction for disarmament. Whether this unyielding position will be endorsed when congress assembles in December is not predicable. One can predict a major diaster, however, if the nation's representatives finally refuse to give over their stupidity...
...insurance commissioner. He heckled the insurance companies enough to make them agree to the regulations now enforced, smiled enough to keep in the good graces of the companies. Northwestern made him a vice president in 1919. He is big, hearty, broad-shouldered, a nailer for work. Insurance people predict that under him Northwestern's shiny marble tomb will lose some of its historic chilliness...
...Pesky Crimson B man. But if the Harvard players are Leary of getting Balled up in a Meadow, if they are Fraad-cats, they'll probably get tackled by two little Brown bear brothers and have a merry Chase. Enough of this. I, Hu Flung Huey ocC, predict a 20-14 victory for the great Crimson team today...
Nazis power. . . . The battle can commence now. In four weeks we shall be victorious-victorious! ... I predict the collapse-the total collapse-of von Papen's program and of his Government!" In Leipzig, a few days later, eminent counsel for the State of Prussia, the State of Bavaria and the State of Baden began an unprecedented suit before the German Supreme Court, claiming that Chancellor von Papen acted unconstitutionally when he, acting under a decree of President von Hindenburg, suppressed the elected Gov ernment of Prussia and replaced it by an appointed Federal Commissioner (TIME, Aug. I). Obviously this...