Word: digester
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...there. The New York Evening Post, under a big spread devoted to pictures of his statues, called him the "Walt Whitman of Sculp-ture." The Philadelphia Inquirer gave him a page of its magazine section one Sunday ("Glorifying America's Workingmen in Bronze and Marble") and the Literary Digest wrote in lively style of an "exhibition of sculpture, now stirring considerable comment, both...
...believed that the plan of omitting class work on Saturdays will meet the demand expressed by many students, not only for a vacant period specifically allocated to the preparation of reports, but also for more time to digest the material covered in the various courses and to pursue individual lines of inquiry and research...
...TIME, Dec. 20, you say of R. Charlton Wright: "A few years ago, his quips outnumbered all others on the funny-page of the Literary Digest; often as many as a dozen were reprinted in one issue...
After his paragraphs were syndicated, he held the lead-the high-water mark being 20 of 42 paragraphs quoted in the Digest for March 14, 1925, as the inclosed reprint of the Digest page will show. . , .-There is no competition between paragraphers; but since Mr. Quillen leads the field, we think he should be given proper credit in TIME...
...have always since early youth been an inveterate newspaper and magazine reader, but on attaining the age of understanding definite needs and capacities, dropped all such reading matter, and now depend on TIME to keep me a citizen of the world. I also read the Literary Digest (skipping current events and foreign news), for a more detailed account of the drama and certain personal notes which are very often the choice selection of the American, which magazine (the American) I do not wish to disparage, nevertheless, it is an awful dose to digest as a whole, for grownups...