Word: expression
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...last few months have been attempting to build up the Harvard Liberal Club, wish to express our personal disgust with the bombastic activities and repulsive tactics of the National Student League. We believe that the actions of this radical group will do much to break down all we have done in helping to construct an organization wherein, by free discussion of radical, liberal, and conservative thought, a rational opinion concerning present-day problems Independent undergraduate investigation of political, social, and economic problems, so necessary today, has been discouraged by this organization whose every activity strengthens an illiberal and unreasoning opposition...
...think that Philbrick sincerely believes in his political theories, and thus is fully entitled to express those theories, but I hold that no act should be condoned, let along perpetrated, that is incompatible with the code of a gentleman. Nixon de Tarnowsky...
...Based on the show hit "Napoleon of Broadway," this saga of the stage was dressed up to Hollywood style by Ben Heeht and Charles Mac Arthur who gave it new lines, exaggerated the heroic, and knew John Barrymore would have the lead. Unlike its predecessors of the "Shanghai Express" variety, "Twentieth Century" has no villains, bandits, or languishing females, but is graced with a frantic, egomaniae producer (John Barrymore), his irrepressive, temperamental actress (Carole Lombard) and ensuing fireworks...
...carried some 1,900 eastbound passengers out of Detroit in less than a year. It cut 9% to 24% off Detroit-Newark travel time compared to the alternate routeing (American Airways to Cleveland, thence by United Air Lines to Newark). , _ It improved Detroit's airmail, passenger and air express service by providing more frequent as well as faster service. It gave Detroit shippers air express service to New York and eastern points on fast schedules and at low rates-a combination that had not been available previously. . . . C. A. STEVENS JR. Detroit. Mich...
...hustings, Mr. Reed had fortified himself in the Senate by embracing the American Legion's entire veterans' program. But his main issue was the unimaginative Republican one of anti-New Dealism. At Connellsville last week he stated it: "You have in this primary the first opportunity to express yourselves on the question of planned economy. Had these features been in the Democratic platform of 1932, that party would not have carried one state in the Union." In aiming at the Democrats in a Republican primary, Candidate Reed assumed that he was also shooting at Gifford Pinchot, whose exact...