Word: trains
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Sarasota, Fla. -- (Baseball briefs caught by CRIMSON editor vacationing on salary check.) Dizzy Dean--on train from Bradenton to Jacksonville, restrained by Mrs. Dean but declaring he was worth at least as much as holdout Gehrig and would not sign for under...
...long-suffering public hopes that Admiral Byrd WILL DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT! He need never, on any occasion, be mistaken for a bellhop, a street car conductor or train caller [TIME, Jan. 25]. He can avoid such embarrassing moments by merely following the precedent set for him by those men whose stripes or stars or whatnots are the result of long and arduous service: No officer on the retired list wears a uniform, any time, any where. His uniform automatically retires with his active status. No officer on the active list wears a uniform while traveling. In fact, he never...
...announced, would go in England to swank Westminster School, although there is in London a special 100% Nazi school to which local Germans are urged by strongest Nazi pressure to send their sons. In late October, Ambassador von Ribbentrop, who nearly always travels by air, finally set out by train for London, arrived at Victoria Station wearing a Storm Trooper's brown shirt. To his official British welcomers he sounded off: "Der Führer is convinced that the only real danger for Europe and the British Empire is the spread of Communism-that most terrible of all diseases...
President Hutchins is a lawyer by training. He believes that lawyers and educators interested in training lawyers must reconstruct legal education so as to achieve a learned profession and the common good. He would train lawyers to practice for the welfare of the community and not as a means of making money. Legal education as he would provide it would train student lawyers thus: ¶To search for and order knowledge relevant to legal problems. C. To know the methods of legal analysis...
...Pittsburgh (471 mi.) than between Chicago and Cleveland (340 mi.) In competition with trucks and steamships which are not thus restricted, this is a serious handicap to the railroads. Counter-lobbying goes on against such pet Labor proposals as the six-hour day, a half-mile limit on train lengths and the "full-crew" plan for adding an extra man to every train...