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...Business Historical Society likewise has its office within Baker Library, with a Smithsonian complex for preserving all items relating to business history...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Baker Library at Business School Outranks Most Such Collections In Nation With 153,000 Books | 9/20/1935 | See Source »

...Seattle last week Dr. Stevenson Smith, University of Washington psychology professor, delighted colleagues and students by showing them a complicated "mechanical rat" which he and a helper had worked five years to perfect. Living rats, especially white ones, are favorites with animal psychologists who teach them to traverse complex mazes bristling with blind alleys, studying the effect on maze-learning of food, light, electric shock, drugs, blasts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Robot Rat | 9/16/1935 | See Source »

...snowy night when Anna goes to the station to say goodby to him and waits alone after he is gone, to kill herself. Largely omitted from all this are the vital secondary themes of the novel, the marriage of Levin (Gyles Isham) and Kitty (Maureen O'Sullivan), the complex affairs of Anna's brother Stiva (Reginald Owen) and his wife (Phoebe Foster). Far more important, however, is what Producer David Selznick and Director Clarence Brown contrived to stretch the limitations of their medium to include: the strong essential melodrama of Anna Karenina's career and the savage, cold and fantastically...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Sep. 9, 1935 | 9/9/1935 | See Source »

...many of us so-called radical or progressive members of the medical profession are foolhardy enough to brave the wrath of the Old Guard of medicine?maybe it is a martyr complex or something?and speak right out in meeting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Aug. 26, 1935 | 8/26/1935 | See Source »

...Southwest played a limited part in Western fiction, usually remaining in the story just long enough to let out a war whoop and bite the dust. With the novels of Oliver La Farge, braves and squaws seem at last to have been given sensible speaking parts, emerging as complex, poetic, dignified, good-humored men & women deeply conscious of the evil times that have come upon their race. Never loquacious, they speak with an easy informality that has the charm of a good translation of dialect. They suffer their humiliations at the hands of white men with impassive reserve, love their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Indian Shorts | 8/26/1935 | See Source »

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