Word: pamphleteered
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Letters column of your issue of April 9. Doubleday, Doran & Co. stated that they would send a pamphlet reprint of FORTUNE'S "Arms and the Men" article to anyone who sent us 10?. We printed 2,500 copies of this pamphlet and had no idea that a single letter in TIME'S correspondence column would cause 3,500 people to send their requests and their dimes to Garden City in the first four days after the letter appeared. This was unique in our experience. We are now rapidly printing 10,000 more copies of the pamphlet. Will...
That is an excerpt from an essay entitled "Confessions of a Drone," written in 1906. It is included in Pamphlet No. 45 in the Pocket Library of Socialism. It is to be found on most public library shelves, hard by the writings of Karl Marx. The author was Joseph Medill Patterson, grandson of the late great Joseph Medill, founder of the Chicago Tribune. Joseph Patterson was then 27 years old, five years out of Yale, four years married, doing nothing...
WHEN Professor Wilbur Cortez Abbott criticized recent historical trends in his pamphlet "Some 'New' History and Historians", he failed to call to account one type of historical writing which is particularly worthy of his censure. That is the New England kitchen-parlor history...
...this connection, a letter which has been sent to each Freshman along with the application blank and House pamphlet states that "in considering special claims for admission to a particular House, weight will be given to a student's intellectual interests. It is not possible to have all fields of knowledge represented in all Houses. It is important, therefore, for those men who have definite interests to consider the implications of the choice of a House for those interests. Careful attention should be given to the special fields within the general fields of concentration which are represented by the tutorial...
Secretary Wallace of the Department of Agriculture in his pamphlet "America Must Choose" insisted that economic nationalism meant drastic control of all business and even perhaps "control of all agencies of public opinion" in order to preserve national unity, but that economic internationalism, while not altogether pleasant and still subject to some new types of social control, was nevertheless less painful. Mr. Wallace said he leaned toward the international solution...