Word: rubbered
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Hasler '34 managed to break the 1-1 deadlock with a tally only 52 seconds after the whistle. Samuel R. Callaway '36 and Duffey, taking an example from the pass combination of Benjamin H. Hallowell '36 and Albert S. Dewey '36, which worked well but in vain, slid the rubber down the ice, with Callaway finally sending it into the M.I.T. draperies after 4 minutes and 24 seconds of play. Duffey himself contributed the fourth score a few minutes later without the aid of his teammates...
...work in this department, he has nothing to worry about. Captain deGive started out in the net, turning in an errorless record. He was replaced by Mittell in the second stanza, and the latter gave way in the last to Ashton Emerson '36, who warded off more rubber than the other two put together. The summary: HARVARD M.I.T. Hasler, Kirkland, Duffey, l.w. l.w., Williams, Notman, Thompson Beale, Dewey, Callaway, c. c., Daley, Healey Holmes, Hallowell, Lincoln, r.w. r.w., Goodwin, Mayo Gleason, Claflin, l.d. l.d., Sylvester, Mathias Watts, Choate, r.d. r.d., Hrones, Johnson deGive, Mittell, Emerson, g. g., Milliken...
...Rubber Money. Last July when from the cruiser Indianapolis President Roosevelt tossed off his amazing monetary message which disrupted the London Economic Conference, his lone companion and adviser aboard was none other than Henry Morgenthau Jr. At the time Mr. Morgenthau's presence so close to the presidential pen was minimized or ignored altogether but by last week its full significance was startlingly plain...
Most U. S. citizens think of the Dutch in terms of a bonneted little creature who is the scourge of dirt. The rest of the world-particularly the British-think of the Dutch in terms of stubbornness. It was the stubborn Dutch East Indian rubber planters who knocked Britain's Stevenson plan of rubber control into a hat so cocked that all rubber planters have been prostrate ever since. The harder the British bore down on production the faster the Dutchmen planted. But if the Dutch are stubborn the British are dogged and together they produce...
...months the British have been negotiating slowly and with great secrecy a production curtailment program. By last week, London understood, the delegates had agreed in principle on a program for 1934 calling for 500.000 tons of cultivated rubber-50% of the potential production and 200.000 tons below the ten year average. Aside from the Dutchmen, production of native rubber, an uncontrollable and widely varying factor, has been one of the chief obstacles of a rubber-tight agreement. But the times are in joint: it is estimated rubber consumption in 1933 will exceed production for the first time in five years...