Word: printings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...contains hundreds of reproductions of early German engravings, the working materials used by Dr. Max Lehrs, one of the world's greatest print scholars, in preparing his monumental work in five volumes, "Geschichte and Kritischer Katalog des Deutschen, Niederlacndischen and Franzoesischen Kupferstichs im XV Jahrhundert", and of articles written by him on sixteenth century German engravers...
...task that takes little time in execution, it is true, but being a unique and significant event in the educational molding of a man, it deserves and demands long hours of cerebration. For it is often the one time that any literary production of the author appears in print. It is the single monument of his pictorial career, and on this attempt he triumphs or fails. Indeed, rarely does a mother who has been disappointed in the sex of her first born experience such difficulties in naming her child as the chairman of groups applying for senior dormitories in devising...
...message took more than four hours to read aloud. So soon as they could obtain the text in print, politicians perused it closely. It is just possible that an issue between Republicans and Democrats can be found before next November. But, issue or none, the Smith record must be the Democratic answer to the record of the Coolidge Administration. In his historical message last week, Governor Smith, using remarkably few phrases such as "all along I have stood for . . . etc." and "as far back as 1920 I appointed . . . etc.," outlined his record as follows...
Nowadays "racket" plays are pasted up by newspaper folk from clippings of their daily stint, with interpolations of plot and jargon which the newspapers know but would not dare print. Celebrity handles the prizefight "racket" with an intimacy that may annoy Fisticuffers Dempsey and Tunney. Of their characters, careers and managers, the Celebrity, "Barry Regan," and his impressario, " 'Circus' Snyder," are licensed composites. Personal mannerisms alone are spared. As for the women the play involves, and the shady proposition of the big promoter, theatregoers can only conjecture how libelous Reporter-Playwright Willard Keefe has been in his notably...
...going to have another bitter political fight to range with those on Slavery, or the National Bank, and in this case to serve as an emetic and tonic. At last the worm, which has been turning for a long time, has accomplished the convolution. The feeling is evident in print, in the new book written by Darrow, and in the belliger out attitude of nearly all the important papers and magazines. The Civil Liberty unions have been quietly accomplishing much in the courts, but the sore will probably come to a head in the person of Governor Smith...