Word: sections
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...that bubble about TIME'S "plucking that needle of fact out of a haystack of news." If your comments cannot be more intelligent I suggest you borrow a leaf from the Nation's book and give us your foreign news in the manner of that journal's "International Relations Section." (But if you did I suppose you'd never reach the point you strive for when you too shall be able to say: "One out of every three yokels reads this magazine...
Object of the Flight: "The object of the midwest flight was threefold, viz.: to test the mooring mast at Detroit, to continue training of personnel and to comply with many requests received from citizens of that section of the country that such a flight be made...
Candidates for positions as "extras" in the "Poor Nut," coming to the Hollis Street Theater on January 11, will meet the manager in the lobby of the theater at 4 o'clock tomorrow. More than 100 men will be picked to appear as part of the cheering section for a track meet which is one of the features of the show...
Full and crystal-clear consideration traces the progressive relationship of a constitution "made in the days of the village blacksmith" to the titanic industry of our own age. But obviously the section on foreign relations most deeply engages the author's mind and heart. A source of serious concern to him is the ability of the House of Representatives by its revenue powers, of the Senate by its treaty powers, of the Supreme Court in judicial review, and of the several states by independent local action, to delay or nullify careful negotiations with the rest of the human race...
Brooklyn, a borough of New York City, hasas populous and bustling an industrial section as any city on this continent, but over its residential district, over drowsing brown stone-fronted streets lingers the breath of a vanished century. Thevchurches on many corners, the winking brass bell knobs on front doors, the window-boxes and plush curtains, all speak of a civic pride that clings anxiously to dwindling incunabula. It is not a matter of tradition, for most of the old families have moved to Manhattan. "Foreigners" and their blowsy women cook goulash and whip children in the houses where...