Word: printings
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Edwin Franko Goldman, conductor of the famed Goldman Band, had offered prizes-one silver, two bronze medals-to go to the persons who recognized the greatest number of tunes from the excerpts which his celebrated bandsmen would deliver. Because it is impossible to print music in the compressed pages of a newsmagazine, readers cannot play the game as Goldman's listeners played it. But they can try it in reverse order. Reading the name of the selections played by Mr. Goldman, they can see if they are able to whistle...
Author Beresford's Explicit Blue-Print for Society...
Author Beresford gave up being an architect 20 years ago, to write psychological novels. His characters are structurally correct, the perspective of their situations perfect to a fault. Unfortunately, they remain largely in the blue-print stage, explicit social diagrams which their creator lacks either the wit or power to bring to life...
...going up to Gloucester to see John Weeks before dashing to New York to take the steamer. I think John Weeks has the levelest head and can see further into a business situation than any man I know. I admire him tremendously. Wish you Boston newspaper men would print that...
...quiet, precise persons whose natural element is card catalogs, rubber stamps, sharpened pencils and orderly multitudes of books, gazed out of the windows of special railroad trains at the Rocky Mountains. At Lake Louise, Banff, Glacier National Park and other places they had located in bold print on the atlas, the travelers emerged from their cars, sighed with admiration, took snapshots, bought and addressed post-cards-"Dear Harriet: Just dandy out here. Wish you were with us. Arrived at 4:37 and leave tomorrow morning at 9:22. Love to all. Edith"-and went to dine in a body...