Word: paged
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...long analysis of some of the Lundberg figures, the Annalist said last week: "No 500-page book on economic history can escape containing true statistical statements but Mr. Lundberg's book has come surprisingly near that achievement." More open to question, however, than Ferdinand Lundberg's facts are the inferences he draws from them, unfailingly deducing sinister motives for acts often quite innocent...
...Book of Common Prayer was fought out in the House of Commons. That the Established Church is weary of controversy, that it would like to think of itself as an institution in which believers of various sorts might find themselves at home seemed evident last week in a 242-page report on Doctrine in the Church of England, product of 15 years of work by a commission now headed by the Archbishop of York. A painstaking, thoroughly British job of Yesing-&-noing, the report, if adopted by the convocations of Canterbury and York, would put the Church on record...
After turning the last page of "The Honeysuckle and the Bee," the reader does not find himself equipped with a mass of data ready to be incorporated in a lecture on Sir John Squire. He finds, rather, an impression of the man, and with this an intimacy with contemporary English men of letters, and indeed men in every walk of his life, for the book does not alone with the writers. Perhaps the work is not of great lasting value, because it may not be great, but certainly it is of intense interest, and significant for its change from...
When the All-American season was at its peak and football fans were lying awake nights worrying about the standings of their favorite grid greats, our special New York correspondent for things musical caught the fever and on this page we have the result--the world's first All-American Dance Band. Composed only of orchestra leaders who attended college and play instruments, it is a band that would please swingsters and waltzers alike. COLLEGIATE DIGEST is particularly proud to be the nation's first publication to honor these men of note in this manner and we only wish...
Those of us charged with the administration of the Ames Competition note with displeasure the story appearing on page one of today's issue of the Crimson, captioned "Reed Faces Poser, to Judge or Not to Judge Ames Competition." The impression created by this article is wholly inaccurate and the five questions, imagined by the writer to be puzzling to Mr. Reed, are neither raised by the rules of the Ames Competition nor judicial etiquette...