Word: blankly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...first meeting of the course will be Wednesday, September 26, at 12 o'clock, Room 121. Thereafter, with the exception of the regular School holidays, meetings will be on Mondays and Wednesdays, from 12 to 1 o'clock, Room 121. Baker Library, from September until February. An application blank will be sent upon request to anyone who is interested if the request is mailed by today to the Dean of the Harvard Business School, Soldiers Field, Boston, Mass
...rupture the naval treaties and bring next year's Naval Conference to disaster unless the Great Powers accept "a new scheme of naval limitation which Japan will propose." This scheme is to replace the 5-5-3 naval ratio with something "fairer" to Japan. When correspondents asked point blank if Japan was asking naval parity with the strongest, Mr. Amau grinned, cackled, "That is a card we must keep up our sleeve. It is premature as yet to discuss the details of our scheme...
...years ago an artist who called herself Nura published a book for moppets in which illustrations of children with milky skins, large heads, solemn black eyes, faced blank pages. The moppets were supposed to fill in the blank pages with stories to accompany the illustrations. This week Nura published her second book. The Buttermilk Tree. This time Nura supplied the story as well as the illustrations...
Last week Mrs. Dorothy Thompson Lewis arrived in Berlin, and as a representative of the Saturday Evening Post put up at the Adlon. Her registration blank went from the hotel to the police, from the police to the secret service. In a few hours a very polite young man in civilian clothes arrived with his hat in one hand and an official letter in the other. It might or might not have been signed by Paul Joseph Goebbels, but it did ask Mrs. Lewis to leave Germany within 24 hours. If she desired, she might have an additional 24 hours...
...Duce needed all his trust in armies as keepers of the peace last week, for away from the blank cartridges of the maneuvers, he was still playing with Austria's political dynamite. In the face of the surly, worried opposition of the Little Entente, owl-eyed Dr. Kurt Schuschnigg, new Chancellor of Austria, arrived in Florence for an interview like those that Benito Mussolini and the late Engelbert Dollfuss used to hold. At the railway station Il Duce met his guest in an all-purpose costume consisting of brown sack suit, riding boots and yachting cap. Most of his staff...