Word: admittedly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...confess that I did not expect that the new British tariff system would work but I am bound to admit that it is producing remarkable results. . . . Three years ago Great Britain had dropped to third place in the list of exporting countries, but today she again stands first...
...anonymous rumor that had been circulating around stated that the dog was now being held by a Boston debutante but this was spiked by the Lampoon. The Lampoon, however, did admit unofficially, that the dog was in the custody of a girl living within 20 minutes drive of Cambridge...
WHEN General Hugh Johnson told the assembled industrial representatives last week "You ain't seen nothing yet," he may not have been thinking of the bill sponsored by Senator Wagner of New Your, but the employers of America are ready to admit today that they never saw, read, heard, or imagined anything in the way of a legislative proposal that could remotely resemble the new "Labor Disputes...
...expected that members of the Lampoon, undergraduate humorous publication, should advance with characteristic reticence to assume responsibility for Daniel's surreptitious abduction, but there are grounds for the belief that the deed was effected far too cleverly to admit the faltering technique of amateurs--however practiced they may be in pursuit of dame publicity. A great deal more basis is there for the surmisal that the thing was purely an inside job, and that Daniel, collar, leash, attractive physiognomy and all--fell victim to dissension within his own camp. His ministry has not been wholly a successful one, and other...
...rise to fame of the young mind. He has had to wade patiently through a series of one and three year appointments before he may grace the ranks of even the assistant professors. He has had to publish works of supposed scholastic merit which have been deemed essential to admit him to the fellowship of learned men. Many of these treatises have received no circulation beyond the examining board and are composed merely to satisfy an academic whim. After casting a casual glance over titles of the obscure subjects upon which the academic aspirant must write, one is inclined...