Word: recommending
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...EVERY HIGH SCHOOL PHYSICS CLASS AND TEACHER I WOULD RECOMMEND TIMES SCIENCE COLUMN OF NOVEMBER 19 ISSUE STOP SUCH REASONABLE THESES OF TODAY BECOME TEXTBOOK FACTS OF TOMORROW...
...from contending with other colleges. The adoption of the Rugby game is a sufficient proof that we gladly recognize, the superiority of other rules even at the cost of giving up our own. We have played under these rules with good success, and we do not hesitate to recommend their adoption to the Football Association...
...recommend to Mr. Cheringt, on, with all the sweetness that I can muster in a somewhat sorely tried nature, that he pay a little more attention to facts before he burst shrieking into print again. He blithely mentions "former Advocate contributors and many others among the long-suffering reading public" as feeling the need for a critical forum. Only one Advocate writer, by no means "former," is represented by an article in the Critic, and he asked and freely obtained my permission to contribute to the new magazine...
...trouser cuffs, keep off the grass. They stop classes every morning for a 15-min. session of crackers & milk. Lawrenceville enrollment has grown from 60-odd to about 500 and a Student Council rules the campus with a firm hand. It may expel any boy for cause, may even recommend the dismissal of a master. Popular in the Midwest, Lawrenceville sends most of its graduates to nearby Princeton. Some Lawrence-villians: onetime U. S. Attorney-General William D. Mitchell, onetime Ambassador to Japan Roland S. Morris, Architect William A. Delano, Art Critic Homer Saint-Gaudens, Author Richard Halliburton...
...measured opinion of the committee that "War may be good or bad." Collective bargaining the committee approved-but it also seemed to approve the open shop. It favored "social insurance" but declined to recommend public ownership of utilities. "Economic planning," said the committee, "may reach a point at which liberty dies." Liberals in the House of Bishops could not let this pass without protest. Soon as Bishop Freeman finished reading it they clamored for the floor. Of those who got it before Presiding Bishop Perry called the session closed that day, none was more outraged than Bishop Edward Lambe Parsons...