Word: review
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...second issue of the Harvard Law Review, to be published on December 10, will contain three special articles, all by former editors of the Review; E. M. Morgan '02, professor of Law, and acting vice dean of the Law School, S. P. Simpson, a member of the New York bar, and O. J. Rogge, a member of the Chicago bar are contributors...
...following speakers will lecture during the second half of the series: The Reverend C. E. Park, Minister of First Church in Boston: Angus Dun, Professor of Systematic Theology, Episcopal Theological School; the Reverend Frederick Palmer, Editor Harvard Theological Review; the Reverend J. H. Holmes '02, Minister of the Community Church, New York City; and H. E. B. Speight, Professor of Biography, Dartmouth College...
...economic field. Directed by a board of trustees which brings together both professors in the Department of Economics and the Business School and representative men of affairs, the Society has done much to develop closer cooperation between the academic and the practical spheres of economic activity. Its "Review of Economic Statistics" and "Weekly Letter" enjoy a limited but ever-increasing circulation among business men who desire to have some greater comprehension of underlying conditions than is afforded by ordinary newspaper reports and articles...
...give their subscribers "added leisure in which to read and reflect"; that the monthly Century would become a quarterly (TIME, Aug. 5). From 1906 to 1928 Century's circulation had dropped from 150,000 to 22,000. Last week, undismayed by the swan song of the quarterly Edinburgh Review (that "modern readers are not willing to wait a quarter of a year" [TIME, Oct. 28]) and in the Review's old colors of blue and buff, that new Century rose from the ashes. Said Editor Howland: "Within these blue and buff covers there are eighty thousand words. They...
...proper criticism of Mr. O'Brien's social theories would take one beyond the scope of this review and would in fact necessitate the employment of most of modern economics and sociology. He is particularly exercised over the increasing standardization of American production and even goes so far as to deplore President Hoover's campaign to reduce varieties of pipe fitting from 17,000 to 610. Perhaps this reviewer is biased, but an intimate acquaintance with a summer water supply dependent upon the cooperation of a Michigan-made pump and the usual New Hampshire assortment of pipe fittings makes...