Word: frequently
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Empire State Building. There Alfred Emanuel Smith and John Jacob Raskob wrung his hand in warm welcome. For more than an hour these three potent Democrats talked campaign politics. Later Governor Ritchie addressed the Academy of Political Science, said nothing important well. Cordial to all newshawks, he gave frequent interviews depicting the certainty of Democratic success in 1932. At a reunion dinner of the War Industries Board, which he had served as counsel, he was singled out for honorable presidential mention by the Board's onetime chairman and Democracy's silent partner, Bernard Mannes ("Berney") Baruch...
Speaking of the value of talking pictures as a supplement to lectures, W. H. Weston, Jr., Professor of Cryptogamie Botany and Chairman of the Department of Botany, said that lack of the desired type of films would hinder the frequent use of the machine for some years to come. Ordinary motion pictures will be shown almost exclusively for the present, pending the growth of a demand from colleges throughout the country sufficient to bring about the production of talks, for the study of academic subjects. There are, however, a few such films in existence and it is expected that these...
...president of the Mellon-controlled Standard Steel Car Co., now a part of Pullman. He plays golf only as a concession to friends, does not like the theatre, hates formal entertaining. But he never misses a good prizefight. At stag parties his songs start early, are famed & frequent. Just as many a tycoon seeks relaxation in reading, playing a violin, constructing ship models or painting. Mr. Joyce has his escape mechanism. When he wants to be alone he buys a couple of apples, rides for an hour or so on the back platform of a streetcar. His handshake...
Besides allowing more frequent debates between European and American universities, this innovation will aid in stimulating debating wherever it is used. There could be no greater thrill for a debater than that of talking and being answered across an ocean. It is undeniable that a public speaker is inspired by the reaction of his audience. With the advent of radio as a forensic medium this will be denied him. But there will remain the satisfaction of speaking to an almost unlimited public both in this country and in England...
...statement could more perfectly sum up the anarchic way out of a difficulty than the letter from Eugene L. Bolisle in your issue of October 19. The too frequent habit of democratic communities, of taking the easy way, of resorting to makeshift, which has brought democracy as a system to disrepute, is just what the letter appeals to. The final statement "People are suffering, this is the only issue, Harvard can give money. This is the only answer", reveals the loss of perspective in preoccupation with a small difficulty, which has made some people believe, that democracy cannot possibly achieve...