Word: suggesters
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Things had to be started quickly. Local officers were to suggest projects, state officials were to 0. K. them, without waiting for approval from Washington. Furthermore, all projects were to be entered upon without contracts which have to be passed on by many legal authorities, and thus slow down any emergency program. No stipulation was made that local authorities had to contribute money, but CWA made many promise to pay the costs of materials...
...dingy decay. Outside of Florence, S. C., Director King found the old Johnson plantation house which he had carefully measured and photographed. When he got back to Hollywood he had the outside of the Johnson house reproduced in full scale (see cut) while interior scenes were made to suggest the big boxlike rooms of Redcliffe. Against this carefully assembled background he was able to do a picture that smacks and smells of the South of 30 years...
...progress beyond his intellectual adolescence. The standards in the elemental subjects with which the prospect has chosen to arm himself to pass the Chairman of Admissions must be raised so that these subjects need not be taught to such students in College in their introductory form. None would suggest the elimination of primary courses, but they should become the canape rather than the cocktail of the freshman year...
...guidance of his tutor and less on that of the lecturers whom he hears. The proposed joint conferences will offer in some measure the desired stimulation to the student, both through contact with other tutors and tutees in the same field and with those in other fields. We suggest the adoption of the plan and its extension to fields other than those proposed. Chemistry and physics, philosophy and history, and the various branches of literature could well profit by an intellectual cross pollenization of the sort offered by these conferences...
...hardly grounds for speaking personally of him in such a disrespectful way. The sole point of Colonel Lindbergh's message was to the effect that the president had condemned men and companies whose explanation he had not first sought to obtain. As the editorial viewpoints of several newspapers suggest the proceedings in the United States Senate last Saturday echoed the very suggestions of the Colonel. "Nemo" must have had a blue Monday Christopher Janus