Word: acceptably
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Germany would be ready without further ado to dissolve its whole military establishment and destroy the scanty remnant of arms left it if neighboring nations unreservedly do the same. . . . Germany is in the main agreed to accept a transitional period of five years for the establishment of its national security, in the expectation that after this period Germany's real equalization with other nations will occur. . . . The German Government sees in the English plan a possible basis for solution of this question...
...only change in the Kirkland House tutorial staff will be caused by the resignation of D. V. Brown '25, tutor in economics and head tutor of Kirkland House, to accept an appointment as assistant professor of Medical Economy in the Harvard Medical School. No successor has been appointed in his place. Next year E. A. Whitney '17, associate professor in History and Literature and master of Kirkland House will return from France where he has spent the year on leave and resume his regular position. J. T. Addison '09, acting House master, will return to his post as professor...
...only country to accept the truce wholeheartedly was the U. S. which, making no reservation for new tariffs on processed farm goods, found itself obliged to postpone operation of its acreage leasing and domestic allotment plans for farm relief...
...first flyers to cross the Pacific nonstop, a feat which has not been duplicated. Soon after their return Pilot Pangborn broke into print with a grievance against his partner, alleging that Herndon had forced him into a disadvantageous contract shortly before the takeoff, when Pangborn had to accept or back out, running the risk of being called "yellow." Herndon made no public reply, but a school of Pangborn-sympathizers nursed the belief that Pangborn had been treated shabbily. The whole business was soon forgotten by the public, until last month when Liberty published an article by Aviatrix Elinor Smith entitled...
...Morris Fishbein of Chicago in a Saturday Evening Post article writes: "Competitive rowing is one of the most severe sports; few trainers will undertake to accept men for training on a crew until they have been carefully examined by physicians as to the state of their hearts. The longer a man has been an oarsman, the greater was the enlargement found in his vital tissue. Strangely enough, football players and boxers show relatively little enlargement in the heart, and cyclists practically none...