Word: openness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Edward, Prince of Wales, who laid the cornerstone of the Capitol Building at Canberra six years ago. This month it is Prince Albert Frederick Arthur George, Duke of York, who has arrived with his Duchess in Australia after a tour of New Zealand (TIME, March 21, 28), to open the new Australian Parliament...
...Building on May 9 in one of the ten British Crossley cars at his official disposal in Australia. Before an assembled throng he will stand with Dame Nellie Melba, 68, "greatest Australian," who will lead a mighty singing of "God Save the King." Soon the Duke will step within, open Parliament, signalize that the world has a new Great Capital...
Winthrop Ames '95, who is the producer of the two Gilbert and Sullivan revivals, "Iolanthe" and "The Pirates of Penzance," which open at the Plymouth Theatre Saturday, emphatically upheld the need of stage censorship in its present form in New York. Mr. Ames, whose first production was "Persepina", the Hasty Pudding show of 1895, is chairman of the New York censorship Committee which is made up of nine playwrights and producers...
President John Grier Hibben of Princeton University will deliver a single Godkin Lecture at Harvard on Thursday, April 28. Instead of two lectures as previously announced for April 26 and 28. The lecture will take place in Sanders Theatre at 8 o'clock in the evening and will be open to the public...
When the Bookman protested that "a direct and open critical attack on any well advertised and well established literary figure in whom a great deal of capital has been invested in publishing and publicity by great publishers is all but impossible in the United States" it overlooked the very pointed arguments concerning the situation which might be made and which have been made by Mr. Harry Hansen, himself a professional reviewer possessed of no great trepidation in denunciatory comments. Mr. Hansen, in the New York Wore' succinctly mentions the names of such critics as Edmond Wilson, Ernest Boyd, Robert Littell...