Word: enochs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Draft Sirs: It is neither TIME nor TIME-worthy to take credit from the dead. See the last sentence in the carried-over paragraph on p. 15, July 3 issue: "It was he [General Johnson] who conceived and directed the Wartime draft." To Enoch Crowder belongs this credit-if credit it is: and not to General Johnson. It irks me to find errors in TIME. MRS. P. M. RUCLEAU Santa Barbara, Calif...
This third and final volume of the late Enoch Arnold Bennett's Journal (a selection from the million-word record he kept from 1896 till shortly before his death) brings to a close one of the liveliest diaries ever written. Arnold Bennett, like the great Sam Johnson, was that rare and peculiarly English product, the apotheosis of brilliant common sense. Unlike Sam Johnson, Bennett was naturally energetic, ambitious, insatiably curious, versatile. Life had an appetizing savor to him; he lived it and wrote about it with zest. Coincident with this third volume of the Journal the Viking Press publishes...
...late Enoch Arnold Bennett, with his appetite for facts-of-modern-life, would have enjoyed this book. Nurse Adriane is a love story, but its setting, a big London hospital, is what will hold any Bennett-like reader. Against this fact-laden background almost any story would do. Authoress James writes her straightforward narrative in straightforward London (as opposed to Oxford) English; though her cases are emotional she deals with them like a competent surgeon-cutting neatly to the essential, never faltering into sloppiness...
Here is the true story of the origin of the expression "Mmmm" as told to me by Enoch Bradley, a scholar of the old schoolhouse...
...John's College at Annapolis, third oldest in the U. S. (founded 1696), was until 1923 a military institution. Surprisingly, it had no military president until then, when Major Enoch Barton Garey, a brisk, sturdy graduate of St. John's and West Point, military science professor at Johns Hopkins, became its head. Also surprisingly Major Garey, though his manual of arms textbook is standard in U. S. colleges, abolished military training at St. John's. Major Garey worked for the cultural improvement of St. John's, but he and the trustees disagreed on policies...