Word: pamphlet
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Students have complained that since the Baker Workshop went to Yale there is no opportunity at Harvard for the study of play-writing. The department gets around this by pointing to a note in the pamphlet on English concentration which says of a composition course, ". . . there will be instruction in play writing for those who desire it." No mention is made of this in the catalogue. What is much more important, no mention of this is made in the courses...
...publishers who know what to do about it are Richard Leo Simon and Max Lincoln Schuster, who issued Inflation Ahead! at $1. Last summer they snapped up a pamphlet prepared by Briton's Major Lawrence Lee Bazley Angas, published it as The Coming American Boom (TIME...
Obviously the listing and numbering of courses is not a major educational problem. For this reason it has been long neglected. Nevertheless despite current practice to the contrary, a university pamphlet should be intelligible and logical. The English Department deserves congratulation upon its initiative in this minor but significant respect. Professor Munn in particular should be thanked...
...receipt was found, nothing was done except to discipline a certain Major Tanaka, apparently because he blabbed the secret to members of the Young Officers League. These naive hotheads, not realizing that they were playing into the peace-minded politicians' hands, dished up the scandal in a lurid pamphlet which declares photostats of the compromising document were made by a sergeant major of the reserve. Reputedly Army secret agents caught up with this sergeant last week, persuaded him to burn his photostats...
...useful and authoritative of argument-settlers, and as an editor of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, he was so personally retiring, "so shadowy to the public that even at the Clarendon Press there were only two persons who had just once seen his face and heard his voice." This pamphlet-biography (60 pp.) by his life-long friend, George Gordon Coulton, is a little British masterpiece, a Goodbye, Mr. Chips come true...