Word: furnished
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...first been planted in magazines like Scribner's, Forum and Century, American Mercury, North American Review, Today The Rotarian. All Reader's Digest gets from this curious deal is the right to reprint what it had originally created. This maneuver indicates that, if necessary, Editor Wallace could furnish his large and loyal following with a readable publication without having recourse to the files of other magazines...
...Gahan and his orchestra will furnish the music at Lowell's annual Fall Dance Saturday evening after the Dartmouth game. Dinner will be served before the affair, informal dress will be the order of the evening, dancing will last from 8.30 to 12 o'clock, and admission will be $2.00 per couple and $1.50 stag...
Thirteen billion dollars added to the public debt. Eleven million unemployed left on base." Noticeably elated by the success of his Chicago oratory, Nominee Landon appeared in Cincinnati next morning to furnish more proof of his growing self-confidence. At the station to meet him was his favorite Cincinnatian and prized adviser, bright young Charles P. Taft II, leader in the city's Charter reform movement (TIME, Aug. 3). After shaking hands with other welcomers, Alf Landon turned to Charlie Taft, checked with him to be sure of the name "Charter," started toward a radio microphone...
Further, if an athlete's grades are low, the H.A.A. and the coaching staff are certainly obliged to recommend some form of tutoring. If tutoring schools will do this free for athletes and others no criticism can be levelled, but the Athletic Association must not agree to furnish financial aid. If a tutoring school giving free reviews telephones the H.A.A. to find out the financial status of a particular player, the necessary information should be given out, even as the Dean's office does...
...potentially powerful institution has once more lapsed into the narrow confines of pedantry and musty research. Theses on such subjects as "French Revolutionary Legislation on Illcgitimacy, 1789-1804" or "Cutover Old Field Pine Lands in Central New England" swell the stacks hidden in the gloomy recesses of Widener, and furnish excellent material for research along such lines, if any is contemplated. They do not, however, lend either to the University Press, or to the College, that general interest and recognition which one would expect as the due of the American counterpart of Oxford and Cambridge...