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Word: either (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Since all Christian bodies from Roman Catholic to Holy Rollers (except the small Unitarian sect) hold that Jesus was divine, it appears that only about 30% of Dartmouth is Christian. Something over 40% are non-Christian theists, and the balance are either agnostics or atheists. All this, of course, on the assumption that Dartmouth students are keen enough to know what they are. The fact that 455 said they are active church members while only 330 subscribe to the distinguishing tenet of Christianity indicates that the boys are not sure what they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Theists, Not Christians | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

...from the hospital (two ambulances, two stretchers), the heavily increased guard about the Ford home?all tend to confirm the plot theory, which Mr. Ford is said to have dropped at the end of the week. Extensive researches by the police and by private detectives have not yet revealed either the Studebaker or its two occupants, even though it is hinted that they are known to Mr. Ford's detectives...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hero | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

Austrian Dreams RHAPSODY?Arthur Schnitzler? Simon & Schuster ($1.50). What chances one misses at a ball! At the whole carnival of life! How dreamlike actual existence becomes how real our dreams, if the imagination is allowed to play over them sentimentally! So muses wistful Author Schnitzler. Being a Viennese, either with less than the usual inhibitions or more than the normal interest in sex, Author Schnitzler supplies his characters with chances and dreams of a strictly erotic nature. A doctor's wife, after a ball, confesses to him how very close she came, one summer at the seashore, to having...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Austrian Dreams | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

...with the study of Addison. More persistent reading of The Citizen of the World papers and less credulous perusal of the Hearst papers might have guided this critic of our national failings toward complete triumph. In such a volume as this, the only excuse for its being is found either in clever irony or in scintillating wit. Mr. Joad rarely betrays either. His comment is bold and unrelieved. In discussing broadly the question of American worship of size and narrowly the growth of our large cities, he speaks of the commuter who "spends his half hour not in healthy exercise...

Author: By Dean ROBERT E. bacon, | Title: A Lion Among the Babbitts | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

...States in China, the Senator explained, "The United States' policy in China is, I believe, a sound one. The United Statese is simply policing the situation for the protection of American lives. Our forces over there have taken no part, and it is expected, will not take part with either opposing faction. Many marines have been sent, it is true, but they are there, not for exploitation, but for peace. I think that the United States government is disposed to be at peace with China, and that it will do its best to avoid becoming engaged in a war with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NICARAGUA SOON WILL HAVE PEACE | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

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