Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Panofsky hobbies: dogs, movies. Panofsky was an ardent cinemaddict long before it became fashionable for intellectuals to take movies seriously, wrote learned papers about films for the Princeton art and archaeology department Bulletin, and the defunct, advance-guard expatriate quarterly transition. For a rest after completing his monumental job on Dürer, Panofsky retired to his Kennebunkport retreat, where he spends much time with his friend and neighbor, Art Collector Booth Tarkington...
...News Bulletin: Single men will definitely be permitted to live off the station next semester. The Review--putting it mildly--was considered by Reviewing Officers to be highly successful. The Captain, Commander Collins, and Lieutenant Anderson were lavish with praise...
Such questions, posted on big bulletin boards, are part of a game that in the past year has enticed over 30,000 visitors to the Cleveland Health Museum. Beside each question is a little flapdoor; behind it, visitors find the answer (answer to these three questions: No).* The museum is full of other tricky gadgets: e.g., by turning a crank, a visitor gets a model demonstration of the right and wrong ways to brush teeth; by dialing his age, he learns how much longer (actuarially, but not actually) he may expect to live...
...wrapped up in giving hoarse directions and calling attention to the memo on the bulletin board which bore the requested information was this writer, that he forget to reward the questioner in question. Thus, if the aforementioned individual will present himself to the Navy office, a big black cigar, certified to be a true copy, will be presented...
...wars of the 20th Century have twice balked quatercentenary celebrations of Vesalius (born in 1514) and his book. But, war or no war, the Medical Library Association has now printed a Vesalius Number of its Bulletin. The majestic, often astounding full-page delineations of skeletons, muscles, veins and viscera found in the Fabrica* are generally attributed to Jan van Calcar, Flemish pupil of Titian. But Andreas Vesalius, to a certain extent an unscrupulous self-promoter, brought his book out with no credit to his collaborator...