Word: credited
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...credit to TIME's able book reviewer for writing the best statement on Virginia Woolf that this writer has ever seen (TIME, April 12). What many lecturers on the novel have endeavored to put across in a month's time, is set forth in TIME so concisely and yet so fully that the Woolf enthusiast is given at once the whole essence of Woolfism. And to crown the whole evaluation TIME takes the crux of Woolfism for its cover caption: "It is fatal to be a man or woman pure and simple Virginia Woolf has turned her back...
...department dealt with the first term of Biology D, a rather trying presentation of elementary botany, and also the lack of a course in Biological Chemistry. But in general the Department is felt by the students to be an interesting one in which to major, and a credit to the University both at home and in comparison with Biology departments elsewhere...
Government activities in the field of farm credit are, say the official Business School review, effectively summarized by John K. Galbraith, instructor in Economics, in an article on "The Farmers' Banking System: Four Years of FCA Operations." Charles C. Abbott '28, instructor in Economics, deals with "The Government Corporation as an Economic Institution", a subject about which little has been written. Finally, among articles discoursing on business and the government, Thomas N. Whitehead, assistant professor of Business, comments upon the importance of the presidential election in the United States. He regards the election as reflecting an underlying social and economic...
...captain, were Marty Barry, fuse of Detroit's famed "dynamite line," who scored the goal that won the fourth game, 1-to-0, and the first and third goals in the fifth; and Goalie Earl Robertson who, recruited from a minor-league team to replace Smith, got major credit for the Red Wings' two successive shutouts. Red Wings' reward: $1,400 for each player, to $800 each for the Rangers...
...even more obnoxious. Until last week none had been withdrawn. Then Chairman Leo T. Crowley of FDIC announced that North Bergen (N. J.) Trust Co. would lose its plaque May 1. Reasons: operating with impaired capital, lending in excess of the legal limit, unwarranted concentration of loans, extension of credit to people and companies in which the bank's principal stockholders were interested. "It was also found," said FDIC, "that the management of the bank by its principal stockholders constituted a hazard to its depositors...