Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...looking for?' don't bat an eye; " 'Try and get well' let them write, and 'Walk slow'; "Surely let them get by with 'If that wasn't so-' "Let us write a nice list of mistakes they can use, "And publish a broadside 'gainst those who enthuse "About writing correctly; we simply can't bother. "But for all unmistakable errors-well, rather! "We'll cross and recross with red ink all of those, "And for those kind the students will pay through the nose! "Better middle-class English...
...from lovers of canines in your issue of Dec. 5. I was glad to hear from them and hope many more will express their views and give facts in support thereof, as I would consider the question from every angle in a book on the subject. If you cannot publish all the letters received, please forward them to me, and also invite your readers, pro or con. to write me direct. No matter how hard they hit. I shall appreciate their honest opinions, as a member for many years of the American Association for the Advancement of Science...
...Exchange, and Joseph Mead, of Standard Statistics, Inc. The group organized itself into the Economic Forum (dues: $5), is forming committees to do research work into current problems. Excited by all the discussion, Leader Martin, whose father is Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, decided to publish a quarterly magazine containing articles on economic subjects, book reviews, transcripts of discussions...
...crying need in academical circles today," stated D. T. Pottinger '06, one of the managers of the University Press, yesterday "is not so much the need of money for research purposes, as much as it is a need for funds to publish the discoveries of trained scholars which are being made all the time. In all fields of research, whether in applied sciences or in the arts, this particular side of the problem is not realized except by those who are directly connected with it. There exists a no more tragic spectacle, to my mind, than that of the striving...
...called 'merchant publishers' cannot afford to publish manuscripts which they have reason to believe will not sell in quantities, and such organizations as the 'American Council of Learned Societies' are obviously unable to finance any material number of articles. This leaves the brunt of responsibility for this important work on the universities. And here, as everywhere else, conditions are not ideal. It is difficult to get university presses successfully started. More consideration should be given to them, as they are at present poorly endowed...