Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Dried Human Milk. Not always is fresh human milk available. So Dr. P. W. Emerson of Boston (reporting in the American Journal of Diseases of Children) has worked out a method of drying human milk. The process is similar to that used in desiccating cow's milk for canning. This dried human milk has been acceptable to a small number of babies as food, not the most preferable food, yet sustaining to life. In some cases this milk had to be fortified with sugar. Then the infants gained rapidly. Later they were able to go on a diet...
...Nothing is taught at Harvard that cannot be learned elsewhere in half the time that Harvard takes to teach it." With such an ultimatum does that worthy journal, the Boston Advertiser, place ashes upon the grave of any over-sanguine faith in Harvard University...
...This exposition of the brain is for the 'layman. About the brain there are thousands of facts to know, facts which TIME makes no pretense of expounding. TIME is not a medical journal...
...which serves to discount the theory that such literary journals as the Saturday Review or the Times Sunday Book Supplement guide the readers of the nation. When "The Women Tempted" has run into numerous editions and has found a place on every virgin's Sex Foot Shelf, the distinguished critics of the country will be forced to realize to their despair that the New York Evening Journal and the Boston Telegram are the true expressions of the nation's taste in light literature...
...Significance. These two volumes are not "memoirs." They consist of the letters and telegrams Colonel House wrote and those he received,* the gaps in the narrative being filled in from a journal or record of the substance of his important conversations, which during this period he dictated every evening to his secretary. The book is therefore no apology. From its nature it magnifies Colonel House, forces him to the centre of the stage. The result has already shown itself in criticism by the admirers of President Wilson. Senator Kenneth Douglas McKellar of Tennessee last week exploded: "It is the grossest...