Word: rival
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Assuming that Conservative Bennett will be defeated, traditional Canadian politics would turn up as victor the rival Liberal Party's genial boss, onetime Canadian Premier William Lyon Mackenzie King who last week was having posters printed with the slogan KING OR CHAOS! Actually the electorate showed signs of splitting to candidates of minor radical parties such as normally would give Canada's old guard Conservatives and Liberals no worries whatever. Ominous was a remark by Liberal Mitchell ("Mitch") Hepburn, who upset Ontario's entrenched Conservatives and became Premier (TIME, July 2, 1934). On a national electioneering swing...
With a total of about 735 students this year, the Business School is the largest unit in the graduate school division with only the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences as a rival. The latter will probably have 700 students enrolled...
With a total of about 735 students this year, the Business School is the largest unit in the graduate school division with only the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences as a rival. The latter will probably have 700 students enrolled...
...taken to jail, and given a fair trial. Courts act quickly in such cases. This is what happened to Zangara, the would-be assassin of President Roosevelt, and to the slayers of Garfield and McKinley; yet the scene in the Louisiana state capitol resembled the settling of accounts between rival gangs...
...having almost as bullish implications as President Roosevelt's later pronouncement (see p. 11). In the little grey house at the corner of Broad & Wall Streets there was evidently considerable faith in the future of the securities business if not in the future of the whole U. S. Rival firms which have been industriously collecting business scattered by New Deal legislation were not so pleased, and stock in First Boston Corp., currently the leading U. S. investment bankers, dropped $4 per share on the announcement. But the stanch and stolid New York Herald Tribune burgeoned with a lead editorial, rumbling...