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...those qualities of the poet on English poetry from his day to our own. In the first essay of the book he says: "It was Dryden who for the first time, and as far as we are concerned, for all time, established a normal English speech, a speech valid for both verse and prose, and imposing its laws which greater poetry than Dryden's might violate, but which no poetry since has overthrown." This statement covers both of Mr. Eliot's main points, and what he says in the rest of the book illustrates, but does...

Author: By M. F. E., | Title: BOOKENDS | 11/4/1932 | See Source »

Aside from the injustice to those who support educational institutions, the private patenting of scientific and medical discoveries has been criticized on another valid ground. Achievement in this line are almost invariably the result of years of study by many different researchers, working often far separated in locality and time. Scientists pool their knowledge, publishing freely the steps of their progress. The one among them, therefore, who supplies the culminating factor in a great discovery is luckier, but not necessarily more worthy of credit, than all the rest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Medical Ethics | 10/28/1932 | See Source »

...make people pious by university compulsion--a ludicrous idea for even a professor to be supposed to hold. What I was really talking about, of course, was the absurdity of regarding any man as educated who does not understand both that religion, like science and art, is a racially valid technic for the discovery of truth, and also something of what that technic involves. Even an undergraduate journalist ought, it seems to me, to have been able to see that the two contentions are quite distinct...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Bell Lettres | 10/5/1932 | See Source »

...along wet rocks, the Martin Johnsons' phonograph playing jazz. There is little pretense of danger. Audiences still shift in their seats when two tons of horny rhinoceros rush at the camera, but the statistical safety of the man or woman with the gun makes the thrill meretricious. More valid is the leisurely charm of the studies of the pygmies, the hippopotamuses, the waterhole. Five minutes of rare comedy are developed from nothing but two pygmies' attempt to light a cigar. Probably anyone with the fare could have taken a sound camera along the main highways of African hunting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Aug. 1, 1932 | 8/1/1932 | See Source »

...named Cameron. The Artiglio's crew last week wished bad cess to Second Officer Cameron. For a decade he had kept to himself the fact that he had also stowed in the Egypt's strong room tons of silk, small arms & ammunition, and paper rupees worth, if they were valid last week, about $14,000,000. Italian divers had performed the prodigious feat of opening the strong room at a 400-ft. depth where pressure was 177.2 Ib. per sq. in. (at the surface it is 15 Ib.). Before they could get at last to the gold, the salvagers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Fortune from Neptune | 7/4/1932 | See Source »

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