Word: either
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Tate had used in front of their children. When Mr. Colson asked one of the parents what "evolution" meant, the parent said: "I do not know and I do not want to know but I do know that I do not want my children to know anything about it, either." The result of this to-do was a request that Mr. Tate, anti-evolutionist and Deacon of the Baptist Church, was asked to resign as Principal of the Farragut Grammar School...
Generally speaking, I like your magazine. However, your stand on Polish questions, exhibiting either prejudice or ignorance of European affairs, is disgusting. I am therefore obliged to cancel my subscription. C. DZIADULEWICZ Kuryer Publishing Co. Publishers of the Kuryer Polski* Milwaukee, Wis. Let onetime Subscriber C. Dziadulewicz specify in behalf of Kuryer Polski instances of prejudice or ignorance in TIME'S treatment of Polish news...
...that Dandy Menjou is an actor as well as an example. All his roles are the same; he wears fine clothes to hide his scrawny shanks; he gets all his effects by raising one corner of his triangular mustaches, by flipping one hand in a small arc to indicate either the tremendous futility of life or his willingness to marry a rich & beautiful woman. In Serenade he impersonates a young composer who, in the flush of success, takes advantage of his wife's good nature. After she retaliates by taking advantage of his credulity, gently implying the presence...
Menelaos shakes hands with his subjects and, by stentorian snoring and an overemphasized case of hay-fever, blows his wife away. Once gone, she realizes that a statue is not an idol unless it has clay feet; and that men are always either snoring or boring. This cultural advance is accomplished with a great pounding of subtitles, and a cast whose gait is not always, but usually, smooth and rapid. Among its members are Lewis Stone as Menelaos and Ricardo Cortez as a sultry but persuasive Paris. Now We're in the Air. Wallace Berry and Raymond Hatton have...
...students of the University who are spending their Christmas vacation in either Washington, D. C., or Philadelphia, are invited by the Harvard Club of each city to attend a luncheon especially planned for them...