Word: anew
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Business Is Business: Coffee Is Coffee. Nearly every day last week President-elect Prestes denied anew that his visit had anything to do with the famed $97,000,000 "coffee loan" (TIME, April 21) now fully subscribed, which was floated in Britain and the U. S. to subsidize the hoarded Brazilian surplus of 16,500,000 bags and keep the price of coffee from dropping like a plummet...
Last year in the meet in St. Louis, the natators broke a record in every event, but Saturday five of these marks were cracked anew and Ray Ruddy, of Columbia, and George Kojac, of Rutgers, set marks in the 440-yard freestyle and the 150 back-stroke respectively that now stand as the best ever. In Friday's events Bud Moles, Princeton's crack breaststroker, broke the mark for 200 yards in his event when he covered the distance in two minutes, 34 seconds. Also in the preliminaries on Friday, the Northwestern medley relay team clipped one fifth...
...half-humorous and half-serious protests by some undergraduates and a few alumni which followed President Lowell's announcement of Edward S. Harkness's gift of The Harvard Houses have largely subsided. But the controversy has broken out anew and with perhaps increased vehemence at Yale to which Mr. Harkness has promised as many millions as President Angell, in his wisdom, shall decide are required to fulfill "the quadrangle plan." Substantially, Harvard's "house plan" and Yale's "quadrangle plan" are the same. Each provides for the division of the old college into several units, containing living quarters for about...
...this new era, two and two may not make five. But such things as laws and institutions, methods of production, available natural resources, number and distribution of population, are in constant state of flux, so that the economist's task is never done. His materials must ever be collected anew, and his work ever repeated; the economic order changes, and the living specimens of today become in a few years the fossil remains of a bygone age. We are speaking, it will be noted, not of changes in theories but of mutations in the phenomena with which theories deal...
...There is an impression in America that Europe is decadent, on the down grade, because of the War. Let me assure you that Europe was never younger than today! It is almost as if the forces of youth had been released anew in the Old World...