Word: bradshaw
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...pieces of journalism. Mr. Roosevelt's "Vacation at Shanghai" is a airsight piece of reporting, filled with exciting material, but marred by flabby writing: "Blood and arms and legs were everywhere." The other piece of journalism is disguised as a serious essay on education for the masses. Mr. Bradshaw would substitute for the impractical curriculum of the High Schools--in which, by a silly trick, he leaves out American History and Civics, and includes necking a practical education in mortgages, insurance, and birth control. Then, he says, the masses will live "decently, sanely and cleanly on $27.50." And he triumphantly...
Granulators: J. A. Bradshaw, R. A. Cox, E. A. Fox, C. Gifford, J. W. Keller, S. McGrath, H. Ritter, A. H. Spaulding, F. R. Rosenberg, R. P. Sprague...
Granulators: J. A. Bradshaw, R. A. Cox, E. A. Fox, C. Gifford, J. W. Keller, S. McGrath, H. Ritter, A. H. Spaulding...
...John A. Bradshaw, Ann Arbor--Cranbrook School, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan...
...Saturday Evening Post story by George Bradshaw on which New Faces is based contained a first-rate comedy idea.. Its hero was a shoestring theatrical impresario whose method consisted of selling a show to several different backers, then making sure that the show was so bad it closed immediately. The method worked perfectly until the unforeseen accident of a hit put the impresario in the miserable position of having to pay 85% of its profits to all its various angels simultaneously. As rewritten by a battery of Hollywood scenarists, this idea is somehow boiled down to the skeleton...