Word: stuarts
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...developing faster than their similarities. If this tendency continues at the present rate, it is not inconceivable that in another decade their similarities will be no closer than those of Harvard's famed Class of 1910, which included such writers as Heywood Broun, John Reed, Walter Lippmann, Stuart Chase...
Leverett snagged the inter-House title in the track meet yesterday with 35 1/2 points. The meet was featured by a neck and neck contest in the broad jumping by Stuart and Mudge, both leaping exactly 19 feet 6 1/2 inches...
Winthrop was well represented by Stuart and Robie, both of whom struggled in to the tape for a tight decision in the 40 yard dash, while Stuart reaped another first in the broad jump, and a second in the 600 yard run, passing all but one in the field in a spectacular last lap, Robie registered a win in the high hurdles...
...attack on loose thinking parading as profundity, on hollow rhetoric offered as a guide to social action, on fakes, phonies, pomposities, stuffed shirts, pedants and wordmongers in general, The Tyranny of Words will to most readers make tonic good sense. But, as with most of Stuart Chase's writing, they are likely to be more impressed with his devastating diagnosis than with his cureall. Picturing present-day human communications as a telephone switchboard with all the wires crossed, Stuart Chase can only look hopefully toward a distant future when, through the rigorous application of semantics, the connection between minds...
...Stuart Cloete's South African novel The Turning Wheels has sold 164,000 copies in the U. S., 50,000 in England, has been a best-seller in South Africa. But now no Cape Town bookseller has a copy. After it had been damned as an insult to Boer heroes, "filthy," discourteous, inaccurate, misleading to foreign readers, Minister of the Interior Stuttaford banned the book with a ruling that stopped importation of new copies. Claiming that the ban was political, with no legal excuse given, the English publishers announced: "The Government feared the loss in the forthcoming elections...