Word: soundingly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...sticks of dynamite, they blasted with loose black powder. On the eleventh day, just after lunch, a cheer went up from the 100 Farleyites who had gathered to watch. For Spotty's spotted body had been reached, thinned by nearly half its previous weight, but still alive & sound...
...slowly . . . but when they get hot they're volcanic." In the Little Italics of Manhattan and California he interviewed priests, millionaires, anarchists, labor leaders-all good Americans, who admired Roosevelt and Mussolini as they once admired Washington and Garibaldi. Again he found few authentic Reds, only Latin sound & fury. The central fact about an Italian, says Seabrook, is that he is "a go-getter, interested more in construction, material welfare and money than in anything else." Of German Americans, he estimated, only 1% are obtrusively Nazi. He calls the Germans "the most important, and most admirable, and generally loyal...
Since the "broad A sound as in what" [TIME, Feb. 21] is not a broad A but a short U. Judge Wham must expect all TIME readers to pronounce him "Whum" until further notice...
What the Student Union can gain, and what it can give to the student body, is a sound working knowledge of democratic procedure, rational debate, and intelligent compromise. It has made a praiseworthy effort to recruit men from all schools of thought, but the crucial test is whether it will now become an arena for indiscriminate strife, or an enlightened and diversified forum. "Every city and house divided against itself shall not stand," and the Student Union should put its house in order before it ceases to be of value and falls of its own weight...
After an arduous workout on the ropes, the Freshmen, at the sound of a bell enter the showers. When they have been thoroughly doused with icy water, the bell rings again and the shivering maidens are allowed to step...