Word: reade
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Sirs: I review 22 magazines at office, scan 18 at home. TIME is only one of 40 literally read from first to last page. Arriving on Friday it receives undivided attention until absorbed. Wife, brother and wife's parents also read it thoroughly. Then to office lobby table. Your style draws me through sections I am ordinarily uninterested in, generally scanned: sports, science, medicine. Have loaned and given many copies to friends boosting your circulation for their sake not yours. Only criticism - too few photographs. G. E. RUSSELL Advertising Manager Oilman Fanfold Corp., Ltd. Niagara Falls, N. Y. TIME...
...formation of the college baseball league in which Yale, Dartmouth, Princeton, Columbia, Cornell and Pennsylvania have accepted places has caused some comment on the independent attitude always maintained by Harvard toward associations in intercollegiate sport. Perhaps the commonest interpretation put on this detachment has read into the Harvard athletic policy a disdain of such leagues. "Old high-hat Harvard" is the phrase most often used to describe what is felt to be an independence amounting to conscious self-righteousness...
...Grammatical Theory of Judgment and inference," an unpublished manuscript by Charles Sanders Peirce '59, will be read by Paul Weiss 2G at a discussion meeting of the Harvard Philosophical Club at 4.30 o'clock today in Emerson 23. Officers for 1929-30 will be elected at the session...
...Jones, G. L. Kittredge, B. K. Little, D. M. Little, P. W. Long, A. L. Lowell, Clark Macomber, R. B. Merriman W. M. Minot, M. I. Molte, A. W. Moors, C. H. Morris, Guy Murchie, R. H. Oveson, Arthur Pope, Charles Peabody, Edward, Read, F. N. Robinson, M. S. Ruggles, P. J. Sachs, Edward Streeter, F. W. Taussig, A. P. Thompson, G. C. Vaughn, Eliot Wadsworth, S. H. Walcott, Prescott Warren, Robert Whitman, Alexander Whiteside, A. R. Wild, and W. S. Youngman and the misses M. T. Morris, Angela Movius, Rllen Pendleton, A. P. pupley, and K. M. T. Thompson...
...spindles, 25,000 looms. Wherever textiles were mentioned, New England mills and Amoskeag were among the first to be named. But the Waters have not been so Swift lately, and the Place for Fish has not stood so high. Amoskeag's 1928 report was last week read by Amoskeag Treasurer Frederic Christopher Dumaine. Outstanding feature of the report was Treasurer Du-maine's promise to "keep the mills running here as long as I can." Ominous was this remark, yet apparently not unjustified. The report showed a loss from operations of $960,698. Among expenses were some...