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Word: pabulum (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...preconceived surmise; we guide the image around our minds, contemplating it from all angles; and after much cogitation we conclude that it is a worthy conception, or no. This process, not solely of the classroom, molds our laws in every relationship. There is no doubt but that much mental pabulum has been left shrouded, only to smother, in the minds of men, material that might have had illimitable influence...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 4/13/1932 | See Source »

When recent graduates of American colleges begin to apply the cold, clear light of reason to educational problems, deserting fictional pabulum for genuine analysis, the future assumes a brighter aspect. A few are heading towards this end, a stalwart valiant few. In the May Forum Edward C. Aswell offers his theory for what is known as the suicide wave among students. He begins by pointing out that as a wave the number of deaths amounts to no more than the annual tide which has always swept in from the uncharted seas of adolescence, bringing disaster in its wake. Nevertheless, objects...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MAL DE SIECLE | 5/4/1927 | See Source »

...rocking-chairs squeak out a dissonant and complaining chorus, thin-lipped ladies swell like croaking frogs into the temporary importance of unofficial news-mongers. Over bored back fences, down dumbwaiter pits, gossiping voices shrill. In cities, the churning presses of newspapers join the rocking-chair chorus, give the daily pabulum of gossip, dignified in print, to stenographer and businessman. Shanghai may fall, Prohibition flounder; the names of "Peaches," Chaplin, Rhinelander still strike responsive chords...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Trivia | 4/11/1927 | See Source »

...reply to the Advocate's charge of a paternalistic censorship by the Widener authorities, it is startling to find Mr. Lane, the librarian, calmly admitting the present censorship and arguing the right, even duty, of his assistants to decide what is and what is not fit pabulum for student minds. "There are", says Mr. Lane, "filthy books, salacious books, books corrupting in influence, which it is no part of the Library's duty to distribute to readers." Thus he lays claim to the right of censorship, to the right to deck Boccaccio and Ellis with fig leaves...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TOUCH ME NOT | 11/18/1924 | See Source »

...pose of satisfying their view of what a newspaper should be-an educated man's paper, liberal, refined, in good taste. Mr. Curtis changed the Post into what he thought a paper should be-a paper for news, a go-getter for circulation, the kind of intellectual pabulum that could attract a large audience. In making the change he immediately lost Christopher Morley, that most genial of columnists. In general, how ever, he did not destroy the paper of the bygone intellectual giants, because it was no longer their paper. The Post had passed their high-water-mark...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Growing Corn | 5/19/1924 | See Source »

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