Search Details

Word: printings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...began arriving from Seattle. The Chamber of Commerce wanted to know when she was coming home. Great plans had been made-a band, a banquet, a car with flowers & flags and room beside Helene for her father. Charles William Madison, honest Seattle cleaner-and-dyer. Obscure Seattlites got into print by telling how she learned to do the dog-paddle in Green Lake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Out of Green Lake | 3/31/1930 | See Source »

Critic Orage, 57, was born in Yorkshire, England. Great & good friend of the late great Katherine Mansfield, he was the first to print her stories. Other contributors to the New Age: Dikran Kouyoumdjian (Michael Arlen), Jack Collings Squire, W. L. George, Llewelyn Powys. During his editorship, 54 books were dedicated to him. Orage now lives in Manhattan, lectures on the art of writing, on the psychological methods of Religionist Georges Gurdjieff (TIME, March 24). Other books by him: An Alphabet of Economics; Nietzsche in Outline and Aphorism; Friedrich Nietzsche; The Dionysian Spirit of the Age; Consciousness: Animal, Human and Superhuman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Uncommon Sense | 3/31/1930 | See Source »

Censored is illuminated by lively illustrations: shots from famed cinemas deleted by various state censors, by photo- graphs of some of the censors themselves. Says Colyumist Heywood Broun: "I al? most believe that the authors could prove their case by doing no more than print the portraits of the men and women who have been set in the high seats and commissioned to frame the taste of the entire picture-going world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Cinema Censorship | 3/24/1930 | See Source »

...Rome last week one Prince Pignatelli. scion of an illustrious line but himself a newshawk for William Randolph Hearst, wrote a short, restrained story which every Hearst editor was careful to print...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: Publisher's Wife Abroad | 3/17/1930 | See Source »

Wearing such stockings and swathed in such furs a Japanese matron might next be attracted by the following advt., tastefully displayed in the centre of a page directly opposite a magnificent reproduction of a print called River Floats in Tenjin Festival. In words first stirring, then discreet, then rational and, finally pious the advt. read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: Return to Normal | 3/17/1930 | See Source »

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