Word: suggested
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Roosevelt talking from his Albany study. Their opening exchanges were easy, informal. Despite the campaign they were, after all, old friends from War days in Washington. The President inquired after the Governor's health, was glad to know he had recovered from influenza (see p. 12). The Governor suggested a day and hour on which to accept the President's invitation to the White House, adding that he would like to bring to the meeting one personal adviser. That was all right with the President who said he would have Secretary of the Treasury Mills at his elbow...
...courses include only two lectures per week. The tutorial system, and more particularly the reading period, have emphasized the central importance of reading by the individual student, with supplementary comment in tutorial discussion and in lectures. It is the function of the lecturer, as of the tutor, to suggest what books should be read, and, once they are read, to give a critical interpretation of the material covered. There is no reason to assume that in every case the wealth of an instructor's information over and above that obtainable in books, together with his interpretative views, are such that...
...exploited in an ingenious way. Once a week for six weeks National Broadcasting Company (like RKO a subsidiary of Radio Corp. of America) broadcast chapters worked up from the scenario of the picture. The radio script did not reveal the solution to the mystery; radio listeners were invited to suggest conclusions for the story, for $6,000 in prizes. The prize contest disguised the real purpose of the broadcast: to create such suspense among the radio audience that all would rush to see the cinema. Advertisements for the trade called The Phantom of Crestwood "the picture that was presold...
...CRIMSON's editorial policy of never giving a definite opinion on a controversial subject. Like some others, I regarded this hesitancy as the result of sitting on the fence too long, which would seem likely to result in emasculation. The glaring grammatical errors in this review seemed to suggest that another factor was involved: the sheer inability to write English. Assuming that these are due to slipshod proof-reading, and passing over such phrases as "ratiocinative circumstances" etc. we come to the real meaning of the review...
...find the facts in Japan and China's quarrel about Manchuria, to establish these facts with high authority, and to suggest an impartial solution, five wise Westerners went out to the everchanging East eight months...