Word: reade
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Thus I was especially irritated to read your story the other morning telling how the modification of the language requirements will help Coach Harlow to produce a winning football team. The change in regulations only affects two members of the team. What is more, I have learned from reliable sources that five CRIMSON editors reap the benefits of this change for which they have campaigned so belligerently all year. Is your intellectual snobdom going to continue its restraining influence on accurate facts which we as your subscribers deserve to know?) (Name Withheld by Request...
Nevertheless, it was with only a faint smile that businessmen read a melodramatic pronouncement by Business Pundit B. C. Forbes in his Hearst column last week...
...response of loyal customers last week warmed the heart of President Tily. He beamed when he read that his plan had been roundly approved by Manhattan's Macy's. Sitting at his desk in shirtsleeves, President Tily confided to a newshawk that the scheme pleased him because it was "ethically and morally right." Pious and high-minded son of a poverty-stricken English gentleman, he is a stanch believer in the ethics of NRA, once advocated a 3-hour working day. Doubtless he had in mind his early years at Strawbridge & Clothier where, at 14, he went...
...follow Translator Livingston's example and read The Mind and Society 20 times; few may find it, as he does "the most significant book I have ever read without any exception whatsoever." But most readers will agree that the translation of so long and intricate a work, packed with cross-references, diagrams, mathematical equations, footnotes in many languages, quotations from modern and classical writers, represents a superb scholarly accomplishment...
...quest for social uniformities, social laws. I am here reporting on the results of my quest, since I hold that . . . such a report can do no harm. I should refrain from doing so if I could reasonably imagine that these volumes w:ere to be at all generally read...