Word: space
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...taking the whole thing by and large Denver rather than the publishers is responsible for the Denver Post. Denver apparently since the gold rush days, has liked its meat raw. . . . Many harsh things have been said about Bonfils and Tammen. Maybe TIME is broad enough and can spare the space to print the estimate of one man who through many years of association believes he got to know the real Bonfils and Tammen. I refer to a letter I wrote to Bonfils when Tammen died in 1924. It follows: "Ever since early this morning when the wires of the press...
...skulls shaped like bathtubs, pears, eggs. But, said he: "It is the contents and not the symmetry of a skull which counts in the long run." Perhaps that is why numerologists, crystal-gazers, table-tippers, ouija-board-pushers, rhythmical dancers and all-round yogis stop at nothing in time, space, mind or matter. Then there is the New World Water Cult, with rooms in New York, Philadelphia and Cleveland, whose members sit with their bare feet in hot water and with cold wet towels around their heads, concentrating on questions for the Water Master to answer...
...which made such astounding speeds in the late autumn was a continuous curiosity. At an easy angle under her stern projected a bronze colored tail, raising her out of water, reducing hull resistance. Miss America V, world's record holding hydroplane, arrived but was not admitted. The show space was already overcrowded. She was removed to the show rooms of her owner Gar Wood, famed racer and manufacturer. The Greenwich Folly of George H. Townsend, President of Boyce Motometer Co., winner last August of the Gold Cup, greatest of all motor boat speed prizes, was absent. But there were...
...Lack of space prevents the publication today in the columns of the CRIMSON of the full text of President Lowell's annual report to the Board of Overseers. In the adjoining column will be found extracts from the portions of the report dealing with the major questions which it discusses...
...diverse are the subjects treated and so full of material and evidence that it would be impossible at once to do them justice editorially in the limited amount of space available in most newspapers. The CRIMSON this morning attempts to offer its readers a digest of a report that should be read in full. In order that those interested in particular subjects may be informed of President Lowell's views of them in tote, the CRIMSON proposes during the next week or so to reprint the Report in sections according to the subjects treated, and will offer at the same...