Word: fines
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...then again, in your review of Gdal Staleski's book [TIME, April 9, p 32] you just couldn't resist the temptation to try to slam the Jews. You mention a list of Jewish composers among them Ravel, Mendelssohn, Rubinstein, Saint-Saens, and Bloch. Very fine and good. But you clever editors must have your say. A little note does the trick! So you lightly dismiss the Jewish composers with "But Beethoven, Wagner, Strauss, Tschaikowsky, etc., etc., vere Gentiles." Your entire attitude is nothing short of insulting to the intelligence of your readers. It is 100% befitting vacuocaputs...
...shown exceptional strength thus far this tear in the sprints, discus, and hammer throw it is not, however, considered as will rounded a team as that which took the Harvard 1930 team into camp last year. In the first year meet, Captain MacDonald is expected to display some fine running in the 100 and 220 yard dashes...
...they will carry away with them the feeling that Harvard as a university is still alive as it was in their undergraduate years. President Lowell and other speakers are there, the baseball team and the band will play, the Glee Club will sign, and if the weather stays fine, the success of the conference should be assured...
...even more incidentally, they made it possible for "scientific investigators" to earn a living as such. The various branches of science are no longer a vocation; they are split into a diversity of professions. This was inevitable. A merely ordinary intelligence can use the technique which only a fine scientific mind could have devised. The main differences will be seen in the theorizing and the application...
...astute evaluation of workers' mentality, giving mechanics on the Equitable's new Manhattan building framed "Certificates of Superior Craftsmanship in recognition of the excellency of their work." Said he at the last certificate presentation in February: "It is a fine thing to be the first in any line, and you may well be proud of the engrossed certificates which may be handed down to later generations so long as paper and ink will hang together...