Word: catalog
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Today, the 1936 edition of the Harvard University Catalog, a 1071 page book listing the students, faculties, and officers of all departments of the University, and briefly describing their activities, will be ready for distribution...
Little if any basic changes have been made in the catalog which is slightly larger than the 1935 edition. Completer accounts of such organizations as the Harvard University Press, and the Hygiene Department are to be found, while a few organizations such as the Harvard Infantile Paralysis Commission are listed for the first time. Another reason for the slightly larger size of the new edition is revealed in the 1936 University enrollment figures, which show an increase from 7870 of last year to 8263 for this year, although college enrollment has hardly changed. Other changes have been merely...
...read a piquant item in the catalog in which swank American Art Association Anderson Galleries last week were describing parcels to be auctioned in Manhattan Dec. 9 & 10. Special clients who were permitted to pore through these early editions of Herr Hitler's Battle found many another rare bit of the Leader's wishful anthropology, since suppressed, revised or left out in translation. Samples...
Every work of Gruenewald is finely reproduced in the series of plates included in this volume. There is also a catalog of Gruenewald's works, with a bibliography of articles and books on him that have been published since 1914. The author might have made this more useful by suggesting which of the manifold German studies would be most worth the time of readers who wish to continue their acquaintance with Gruenewald...
...book is somewhat like an old-fashioned geography turned upside down. Beginning with a discussion of rivers, plains, mountain ranges, rainfall, Stuart Chase proceeds to long, eloquent, angry lament on the squandering of native riches. Like the Whitman of a bankrupt country, he composes a great catalog of lost national wealth, including the buffalo, the passenger pigeon, eastern salmon, Pacific halibut, petroleum, timber, coal, the great auk, the Carolina parakeet, the drought-impoverished Dust Bowl. It is a disturbing account, calculated to make any responsible citizen treasure every green tree and each clear brook of his native land. The oyster...