Word: digged
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...executive and administrative ability. The organization must have met with a broad knowledge of the fundamentals of marketing and advertising, and the ability to apply this knowledge in a practical way in the development of constructive advertising plans. The analyst and statistician must be there also in order to dig out and compile the facts which are necessary for the building of any sound plan. And then there must be creative ability in order that the advertisements which are produced may be not only truthful and informative, but also attractive and interesting...
...throws Barnard's hat into the ring; claiming that the recent action of the Student Council there, taking a stand against faculty censorship, proves "the truth of the remark that women's colleges are about the most intellectual spots in the United States." Frankly, we consider this an unnecessary dig at male conceit; even if the women's colleges are above the intellectual Parnassus on which men's colleges serenely squat, what of it? It can probably be said of them as, it was of Shelley that they have both feet and heads in the clouds; which is not exactly...
...millions. Past experience has shown that the estimates of those who foster large scale expenditure are apt to err upon the slender side. In this case, the law of probability favors the accuracy of the Secretary's opinion rather than the Senator's. Apparently, then, the present bill will dig pretty deeply into the pocket-books of the American public...
Germany, like "The Varmint", will never allow its neighbors to become bored. Not content with assuming the financial obligations of half the world, the Germans have decided to dig a little deeper into their pockets and their Fatherland. Having stumbled on an odd billion or so (marks not dollars), they have, according to an Associated. Press dispatch, organized a canal corporation at Munich to construct a two thousand mile waterway by joining the Rhine, the Main and the Danube. The engineering details will tax the German imagination as much as the Allied Reparation Demands will tax their pocket books...
...policy has certainly been to play both ends against the middle. But whatever the future may bring forth, Lloyd George will no doubt have a solution and will sign more pacts to straighten matters out. He has been in tight places before, and he, has always been able to dig his way out in a most remarkable fashion...