Word: galluping
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...over the meeting. Professor O. M. W. Sprague '94, who will represent the Business School, was economic adviser to the Bank of England until 1932 and financial authority to the Secretary of the Treasury until he broke with Roosevelt on fiscal policies of the New Deal. Col. Dana. T. Gallup, who is legal adviser to the State Draft Board will also speak...
...Willkie." Arthur Sears Henning (Chicago Tribune): "For Willkie, 280; for Roosevelt, 182; doubtful, 69." Wall Poll: "Roosevelt will win the popular vote, but . . . Willkie may win a majority in the electoral college." Senator George W. Norris: "If President Roosevelt is not reelected, Mr. Willkie will be elected." Gallup Poll: Roosevelt: 21 sure States (198 electoral votes), nine States leaning to him. Willkie: eight sure States (59 electoral votes), ten States leaning...
...president of the Boston Chamber of Commerce; Professor O. M. W. Sprague '94, of the Harvard Business School, economic advisor to the Bank of England until 1932 and financial authority to the Secretary of the Treasury until he broke with President Roosevelt on his fiscal policies; and Colonel T. Gallup, acting judge advocate of Massachusetts, legal adviser to Governor Leverett Saltonstall on military service, who was elected to the General Court from this district on Tuesday...
...George Gallup (Institute of Public Opinion) last week found a ½% increase in Willkie's popular vote (to 45.5%), an increase of four in electoral votes (to 121), 7% of the voters still undecided. But ten key Roosevelt States were well within the poll's 4% margin of error, and the trend to Willkie had not been stopped. Preparing for the worst, Gallup confessed: ". . . There are . . . factors . . . which cannot be measured by scientific methods...
...White-Haired Boy" has all the car-marks of a good play. Satirizing an author whom the Gallup poll has concluded to be William Saroyan, it's crammed with crack-pot situations that would do justice to "You Can't Take It With You." Only this time it's Mrs. Kaufman along with Charles Martin who are the authors. They say that George sat through the first-night glum as an owl. His wife can make up the situations, but she just doesn't have the lines to go with them. The whole play is strained; at times it gets...