Word: publishers
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Miller. Last year it was reported that New Directions was about to publish Tropic of Cancer, by the inexhaustible
Professor Euros had suspected that nine out of ten tests were unreliable. To check his suspicions, he got 133 top-rank experts to rate the tests, Rutgers to publish their ratings (The 1938 Mental Measurements Yearbook-Rutgers University Press; $3). To some tests, notably Louis Thurstone's famed intelligence test for college freshmen (American Council on Education Psychological Examination), the experts gave a clean bill of health, high ratings. Elsewhere they turned up many a prize absurdity. Samples...
...last week some test publishers had broken off diplomatic relations with Professor Buros. Nevertheless, the professor was almost ready to publish a second yearbook. This time, instead of 133 experts he had 245, among them such famed testers and educators as University of London's Charles Spearman, Yale's Edward S. Noyes, Iowa's Carl Seashore, Harvard's Charles Swain Thomas, University of Chicago's Ralph W. Tyler...
...right of students and Faculty members and their organizations to publish and distribute their views...
Having put out one issue of a publication called "Debutante Diary," Harold A. Wolff '29, proprietor of Wolff's Tutoring School, announces that "because of press of business" he will not publish again in the near future...