Word: addresses
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Your several circular letters advising me that my subscription would shortly expire have been received. I am well aware of this expiration and assure you that I enjoy reading your publication, but regret that certain conditions prohibit me from renewing my subscription at present. As my address shows I am living at an hotel where the help are very careless with mail. I have failed to receive quite a number of copies of TIME and have gone to the office several times to get my mail and found transient guests, lounge lizards, and lobby loiterers reading my paper, which they...
...onetime Socialist. Deputy Tito Zaniboni (TIME, Nov. 16, 1925 et seq.) who was arrested at his hotel bedroom window calmly puffing a cigaret and training a high-power rifle upon the balcony of Signor Mussolini's office, from which II Duce was shortly to deliver his Armistice Day: address. A special military tribunal sat upon the case last week in the grim Roman Palazzo di Giustizia; but the prisoner faced only the normal Italian criminal law. Recent legislation providing the death penalty for attempts on the Premier's life is not retroactive (TIME, Nov. 15, 22), and would-be-assassin...
...second honor of the evening in the form of the first Boylston Prize was won by K. M. Capper-Johnson '27, who used as his speech an address, "On the Reduction of Armaments" given at Geneva in 1924 by J. Ramsay MacDonald. The second Boylston Prize was won by B. A. Wolff '29, who gave "Not Guilty", an anonymous piece of prose, with H. L. Kozol '27 taking the third Boylston Prize with his recitation of "The Man With the Hoe", by Edwin Markham...
President James Rowland Angell of Yale University: "The elaborateness of modern college endowment activities was suggested by news last week that one afternoon this month, before I address a 'master dinner' of Yale alumni in Manhattan at the official opening of Yale's latest $20,000,000 campaign, I am to address by radio all Yale alumni in the U. S. and also Europe. A 32.79-metre wave, it is expected, will make my plea for money heard by Yale men, idle and diligent alike, in London, Paris, Berlin, Venice, Cairo...
...clock, Address, "Morals and Instincts" by Dr. Worcester...