Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...would like to be President. I think any American in political life who pretends otherwise is wholly hypocritical."?a letter purporting to be from Senator Hiram Johnson, published in The Bulletin, San Francisco...
Tularaemia, a newly discovered disease of man, may be widespread in the United States, according to a recent bulletin of the Hygienic Laboratory of the U. S. Public Health Service. It is caused by the Bacterium tularense, which is transmitted to man by the bite of the blood-sucking fly, bedbug and similar insects from infected rabbits, squirrels and rodents. The disease is seldom fatal to humans, but is accompanied by pains, septic fever lasting from three days to six weeks, prostration, swollen and suppurating lymph glands, and ulcers on the site of the bite, followed by several months...
...bulletin of the Bureau of Education (Bulletin 1923, No. 15) codifies neatly the state of the law as to Bible-reading in the schools. Six states require daily Bible-reading in the public schools, six permit it by statute, ten forbid it. Of the remaining states, the reading of the Bible is construed as permissible in 24 (the law being silent on the subject), while in two the state of the law is in doubt...
...should rate the "Amherst Student" as the best American college paper, and we particularly compliment Mr. Warner on his excellent editorials--excellent both in subject and treatment. Amherst has close rivals in the "Yale Daily News", the "Vassar Miscellany," the "Harvard CRIMSON", the "Bryn Mawr College News" the Barnard "Bulletin," and the "Mt. Holyoke News." It seems to us that these papers in the order given come nearest to being well-balanced news sheets, giving due space not only to athletics but to religious, political, social, and educational questions of the day, with good discussions and editorials. They...
...last come, there are means ready at hand for bringing it about. Mr. Eliot Wadsworth '98, in an article on "The Future of the Class" in the Senior Album, has set forth these means and their manner of working. Briefly they are the Alumni Association the Harvard Bulletin, the Harvard Clubs, the Associated Harvard Clubs, and the Class reunions. These will still remain names only until they come within the experience of the individual, but to those who read his article they will no longer be vague of unknown terms...