Word: crediting
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...stickmen will face a difficult task if they are to keep their record unstained. After a slow start, the schoolboy team has developed fast and with a 3 to 1 victory over Stone School to its credit, it should offer stiff opposition to Captain Saltonstall's men who showed a reversal of form on Thursday when Milton Academy held them to a tie score. Owing to the poor condition of ice yesterday, no practice was held...
...Professor Baker has left, and someone must fill his place; and to look at the whole affair with a different eye, perhaps it is advantageous. After all it is not quite certain whether artists (of dramaturgy as well) are born or made; hence we may be assigning too much credit to Professor Baker...
Finance. The private agencies which formerly made loans have suffered setbacks which have restricted their loans. The result is a shortage of primary discount agencies. The Federal Intermediate Credit Bank is fully equipped to finance the primary discount agencies-in short, there is a good financial middleman, but too few financial retailers. The Federal Farm Loan Board should encourage the setting up of more financial retailers and make a report on its progress by July...
...Author. Mr. Felix Isman was once the business partner of Weber and Fields. With them he ran the Broadway Theatre, Manhattan, and produced many successes. They begged him to write this book about them. When it ran serially in the Saturday Evening Post, Wesley W. Stout was given credit as joint author. In the foreword Mr. Isman (an Elk, a Mason, now a realtor) thanks Mr. Stout for his assistance...
...Aristotle, or he may, as Mr. MacDonald said, have difficulty in signing his own name. He may be back in the country somewhere, singing the old folksongs, or talking about his sheep and his dogs, or quoting Burns. This is defining education not in terms of "counts" and "credit" courses, of "majors" and "minors," nor in professional or other vocational achievements, but in simple spiritual and intellectual values. . . . . New York Times