Word: reade
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...wife of Leftist Aviator Harold Dahl (captured by General Franco's Moorish troops, condemned to death, and subsequently pardoned) did not read TIME'S story (Oct. 18) carefully. TIME said California wanted them both: him for three forgery charges, her for a movie contract in Hollywood. But TIME erred: Aviator Dahl is wanted on eight counts for passing rubber checks...
...Read to both Houses by their clerks, the message started with a discussion of the business recession and legislative means toward ending it. Said the President: "The fundamental situation is not to be compared with the far different conditions of 1929. . . . Obviously an immediate task is to try to increase the use of private capital to increase employment. . . . Private enterprise, with co-operation on the part of Government, can advance to higher levels of industrial activity than those reached earlier this year. . . . Such advance will assure balanced budgets. . . . If private enterprise does not respond, Government must take up the slack...
...Hopkins, who is the dean of American urologists, knows of only 20 indisputable cases of true hermaphroditism, patients who had within themselves both ovaries and testes-sole and essential criteria of femininity or masculinity. All others whom he has seen in his 40 years as urological surgeon, or has read about, have been pseudo-hermaphrodites. These exhibit a most amazing variety of genital abnormalities. But on the testimony of their sex glands, no matter how rudimentary those glands might be. Dr. Young classifies them as male or female. Statistics, he notes, "indicate that pseudohermaphroditism occurs once in 1,000 persons...
...Rosten discovered that among daily newspapers the New York Times is best read by the Washington corps, considered most reliable, most desirable to work for. Hearstpapers and the Chicago Tribune are rated least fair and reliable. Among the weekly magazines, TIME and the Nation tallied first and second in readership...
...behind the team and behind the undergraduates are the thousands of alumni glued to the radio from New York to Australia. Since 1933 the cup of victory has not touched Harvard lips, though last fall at New Haven it seemed close, and the present Puritans are parched. They read in the papers that the team is good, for work and sustained drive have produced a deceptive and polished attack that will "go" in the absence of a star. That Yale is a great team cannot be denied, but the College feels that if spirit and resolution count, Harvard, too, this...