Word: crediteer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...infinite credit, the authoress has succeeded in endowing her pages with intense, at times terrible, vitality. To be sure, there are none of the tricks which make for artful smooth writing. Rather, her approach is direct, blunt, similar one often remarks, to that of an oral narrator. But her character analysis and descriptive power are nonetheless shrewd, firm, displaying a startling insight...
...wiping the whole complicated web of inter-governmental obligations starkly from the slate. It would reach even beyond re-establishing the self curative factors which Sir Arthur Salter attests to be the property of all healthy depressions, and which were bound and buried by the enormous extensions of private credit and the contraction of trade which were the aftermath of the Treaty of Versailles. The great thing would be the precedent for disarmament and for peace which an arms moratorium would establish...
Meanwhile the bond market has voiced ever lower opinion of the future of Japanese credit. But it hinted strongly at U. S. recognition of Russia under the Roosevelt regime. Last week Russian Imperial 5½% bonds, which sold last summer at about half a cent on the dollar, rose to four cents on the dollar...
...limit. But liberalism is increasing in the secondary schools; work is being done which does not fit in with ordinary college entrance requirements. Last week the Princeton board of trustees directed that the admission requirements for Princeton be revised. Henceforth, instead of being obliged to present 15 units of credit (each representing one year's work in one subject), a student may present 12, plus credit for such advanced work (social studies, fine arts, etc.) as he has done in school...
...Freshmen swept into the lead from the start and at the end of the first quarter the score was 15-5. J. G. Grady '36 was the high scorer of the game with 11 goals to his credit...