Word: zine
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Would the U.S. people stick to their course? The opinion of a visitor may be more pertinent than the guess of a native. This week, in the New York Times maga zine, Barbara Ward, foreign editor of London's Economist, who had made two trips to the U.S. in 1947, wrote: "I believe that the American people-the only people in the world who thought of an ideal first and then built a state around it-will prove in the long run happier, freer, and more creative when they carry that ideal of a free society out into...
...contributions to date showed that the College program was rumbling down the alley with increasing speed, surpassing in some houses the amazing $4.60 average donation of last summer's campaign. With the exception of one well-padded hardease who responded to the solicitor's pleas with a zine penny, students have expressed sincere concern and admirable generosity towards the tubercular scholars of Greece and China. However, the College comprises only one of the four zones of University effort, and its remarkable showing is dangerously off-set by the disappointing record of the faculty and the 900 non-resident students...
...first 175 pages he has written a good man's story, a story that many a pulp mag zine carries every month. Not, however, one that a high-class magazine, such as the Post or Scribner's would touch with a ten-foot pole. After that, with the exception of a few lines about the hero's death and his wife, the rest has no more relation to the first than day has to night...
...article published in the maga- zine of the Columbia School of Journalism Professor Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman of Columbia made the following points: ''That the depression is ending; "That, for the first time in history, recovery from the bottom of an industrial cycle is being speeded consciously and effectively; "That fear of uncontrolled inflation has little basis in fact; "That we are not on the way to Bolshevism, Fascism or any other form of autocracy, but; "That we are in the midst of a social revolution, within the framework of capitalism, which promises lasting benefits...
...north, lived for some years on "the capricious bounty of the wealthy." Then a fund was established; they settled down to get Helen through Radcliffe College. After the Radclifie degree was triumphantly won (cum la tide). Helen and Annie made a cinema (a commercial failure), wrote books and maga zine articles, went on the vaudeville stage, the lecture circuit. Wherever Helen went Annie went too. to guide, protect and interpret her. Even Annie's marriage in 1905 (to the late John Macy. Harvard instructor and critic) seemed to make no difference; nor its break-up later...