Word: pamplets
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Brown junior Noel Wiggins, the pamplet's author released "Harmony" for the first and last time last week, said Brown Daily Herald Editor Phil Calian...
...louder incidents occurred in the fall of 1951, when one Alfred Vellucci was campaigning for a post on the Cambridge Schools Committee. The strong point in his drive for election was his announced morals crusade, in which he distributed a pamplet called "Arouse Ye Citizens," signing it "Al Vellucci, Father of Six." With a larger brood to guard than most, he was intimately concerned with obscene literature, and asked that cheap and immoral books be banned from stands where children could pick them...
Quietly and decisively the Union Committee adds each year to its usefulness. 1935 marked the first Confidential Guide, and 1936 saw the enlargement of that pamplet and the first few faltering reviews. Yesterday the Freshmen announced the expansion and refinement of another year-old scheme--the talks on fields of Concentration. Not fourteen but twenty-five fields will be served up, each presented with its most succulent trimmings by a leading instructor. At the conclusion of the series President Conant will speak, summarizing the preceding talks and framing them in general observations on education and concentration. As long...
...Herr Quidde?" roared the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, and answered: "More than 30 years ago he gained cheap fame with the pamplet Caligula." Indeed, few Germans could recall, last week, the full title of that pamphlet: "Caligula: A Study of Caesarean Insanity." When published, it temporarily wrecked the good Professor's academic career?for in it he dared to suggest that Wilhelm II might fall a prey to that madness born of power which destroyed the reason of the Roman Emperor Caligula (12-41). Because Professor Quidde has continued all his life to militate against militarism and to propagate German peace...
...Edgar J. Rich, a former managing editor of the CRIMSON and at present a practising lawyer of Boston, has sent us a pamplet entitled "A Fundamental Principle of Political Economy." It is an "examination of a so-called economic fallacy" and Mr. Rich's purpose, as he explains it in an introductory note, is to state as concisely as clearness permits a proposition which he believes to be fundamental in the science of political economy - a proposition which is declared false and absurd by almost every reputable political economist...
| 1 |