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...Fellows are not bound by any doctrinal tests, or committed to any academic procedures. They teach, within the framework of their schools, just as their judgments dictate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: College Consultants | 12/1/1930 | See Source »

...characteristic and workmanlike kind of comedy. He is an ambitious salesman in a Honolulu shoe store who falls in love with a girl whom he takes for an heiress but who is really a private secretary. Fortunately, not much attention is paid to the plot, except as a framework for gags. Such a gag is the sequence in which he makes some light social remarks about a titled Englishwoman whose name happens to be the same as that of a racehorse with which he is familiar. There is a gag with fishcakes and a dog, and a gag with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Nov. 10, 1930 | 11/10/1930 | See Source »

Three's A Crowd has for its principals the triple-threat team of last year's Little Show: nimble, spindle-shanked, emaciated Clifton Webb; droll, ready-voiced Fred Allen; mellifluous, primordial Libby Holman So excellent is the work of these three performers that the framework of the show seems almost negligible. Best scenes of the headliners...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Oct. 27, 1930 | 10/27/1930 | See Source »

...York, was on hand. Statesman Stimson had served President Hoover like a good lawyer at the London Naval Conference. In much the same legalistic way at Albany he defended and expounded the record of his chief in a keynote address which seemed to set up definitively the national framework for this year's Republican campaign, to foreshadow the basis for Herbert Hoover's bid for renomination and re-election two years hence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Hoover's Brief | 10/6/1930 | See Source »

Said Mr. Youngquist: "The law-enforcing agencies of Government . . . are not much more than the framework in an organization of the kind required . . . one agent to every 70,000 [inhabitants]. The utter impossibility of making enforcement effective by that means alone is at once apparent. . . . And the States have machinery ready to work. . . . The number [of State officers] is probably near 175,000 now, as compared with a force of 1,750 agents in the Bureau of Prohibition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PROHIBITION: Refrain | 9/8/1930 | See Source »

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