Word: careful
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...between 70,000 and 100,000 copies, Publisher Horovitz has been able to bring his prices down to the popular novel level. Scholars and critics respect them because European scholars and critics of authority collaborated in their making. Craftsmen admire them because their reproductions are the result of painstaking care and patience which has often extended to six months' labor on a single plate...
Manager Art Ross hardly opened his mouth. Such Bruin stalwarts as Eddie Shore, Bill Cowley, Cooney Weiland, and Gordon Pettinger were absent. Even Tiny Thompson didn't seem to care how many times the puck was shot past him. Rather he played the clown most the time and purposely left the net undefended on many occasion to engage in mad scrambles several feet out. At one time he carried the puck to center ice before losing it. At the time someone mentioned that Tiny was once the fastest member of the Bruins on skates. He did pretty well today even...
...communist is treated with as much interest and care as the believer in American democracy. Yet it is perfectly clear where the author's sympathies lie. The communist is not made a contemptible figure as in "The Ghost of Yankee Doodle" or "The Prodigal Parents," but he is made a hateful one. He is aptly called humanitarian who hates humanity. He is working for a goal and is wrapped up in an ideology that make him renounce friendship, patriotism, love, and self-interest. But the fallacy is that he is not only impersonal, but also inhuman; he is not even...
...present several students are busy on posters advertising the dance. Those who create acceptable ones will receive two free tickets. All expenses for materials used in the posters will be taken care of by the Committee. In this way, it is hoped, students will be encouraged to contribute large-sized murals...
...year of $975,000,000. Thus FDIC has or can raise a maximum of a billion and a quarter dollars as an anchor to windward for some 20 billion in deposits. Whether the anchor would hold in the face of a real banking storm even Leo Crowley does not care to assert, but in the 179 bank failures since FDIC began (nine in 1934, 26 in 1935, 68 in 1936, 28 in the first half of 1937, 48 in the second half), FDIC has paid out $44,000,000 to depositors, recovered 75% of it by liquidating the assets...