Word: pamphlet
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...committee has also decided to revise the social service pamphlet issued annually by the Phillips Brooks House to make it more into the form of a text book for novice social workers. The pamphlet will contain a thumbnail sketch of the work and aim of each house and also a bibliography of books helpful to social workers. In the latter connection the library at the Phillips Brooks House will be increased to include a special social service department...
...Germanic languages and literature as a field of concentration are discussed by Professor William Guild Howard '91, Professor of German, in the following article, the fourth of a series which the Crimson is publishing to supplement a pamphlet published in 1922. In this article Professor Howard explains the importance to scientists of a knowledge of the German language and the further importance to all men of some understanding of the German literary tradition...
...spoke at the Berry School, told how Miss Berry had gone to him at the White House to get introductions to philanthropists: "When Miss Berry turned up ... there were a good many statesmen in the room with her. I looked at the letter of introduction, then glanced at the pamphlet; then I saw Miss Berry at once, and when they tried to interrupt me, I said: 'Let them wait...
...word was Rayon". . . . Calvin Coolidge, Washington, D. C., April 6, 1925. This legend appeared on the cover of a pamphlet circulated by Bonner, Brooks & Co., No. 1 Wall Street, to promote the sale of stock in the new American Rayon Products Corporation. Scrutiny of the President's recent speeches revealed that he had delivered himself of the following utterance to the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers : "In the course of some researches, preliminary to these remarks, I found myself needing a more accurate definition of a certain trade term, no doubt thoroughly familiar to all of you, than...
...following article, written for the Crimson by Dr. Richard Clarke Cabot '89, Professor of Social Ethics in the University, is the first of a series of similar articles which will be published by the Crimson through the spring. The series is designed to supplement the pamphlet published by the Crimson in 1922 on the choice of a field of concentration. On March 12, the general purpose of the system and the scope of these articles on the several fields was explained in the Crimson by Dean C. N. Greenough...