Word: safes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...could be anything else. He also said that everyone on the Harvard team did a good job, and again he was right. Whether he will be satisfied after the Navy game and whether he will think that everyone did so well, is another question. While he may, it seems safe to say that the Springfield game just didn't show...
From two dangers besetting C. I. O., the A. F. of L. is safe: the danger of an untrained army's disintegration and the danger of political defeat that might be brought on by following a too adventurous leader. Not even in numbers has the A F. of L. yet become the lesser half of the House of Labor. The C. I. O. vaingloriously claims 3,700,000 members, many of whom, however, are only members insofar as they have signed an application blank. The A. F. of L. after losing 1,000,000 members...
...construction of more dugouts. Only a few Chinese government buildings had been damaged, none of importance destroyed, and an improvised earthen dugout at the U. S. Embassy had not been hit by anything, although a Chinese anti-aircraft shell had splintered around the gatehouse. "It's just as safe here as on the river," announced Ambassador Johnson moving his whole staff back into the U. S. Embassy-after which natives of Nanking again beamed at sight of the Stars and Stripes wherever shown, made no more insulting noises or gestures. After inspecting Nanking, military experts opined that unskillfully constructed...
Last of Harvard's great halfback line, which also had John Dorman and Frank Vincent, Danny Burbank graduated last spring. Coach Carr is missing him this fall. With the opening game against Brown on October 9, only George Phillips, southpaw, is a safe bet to start at halfback. Bob Scott, married man, who played center half regularly in 1936, knows only too well about the competition in 1937. Freshman Coach Jim MacDonald has sent up a member of potential middle ground stars, including Jim Rousmaniere, Robin Scully, and Charles d'Autremont. Ned Whitney and Bernie Jacobson, of last year...
Sneaking out of Chicago, the Vagabond spent the weekend traversing Missouri and Kansas and annoying farmers in Model T's and roadside cows with bits of dynamite that went "Bang!" and sometimes "Bang! Bang!" or just "Phfft!" Safe in Colorado Springs, he cheated the most ritzy hotel out of fifty cents for the use of their tennis courts. He headed for what he thought was Albuquerque and grew excited when two girls waved at him from a train that was chugging up a mountain. He followed the train sixty miles, only to discover he was going East...