Word: graphically
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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...Patriot's Progress is the story of John Bullock, young London clerk who joined up soon after war was declared, to fight for King & Country. In graphic, impressionistic, sometimes onomatopoetic prose, Author Williamson tells what happened to Private Bullock, from his raptured enlistment and training on Salisbury Plain to the attack beyond Ypres in 1917 when a shell left him with only one more leg to give his King & Country. "Then his heart instead of finishing its beat and pausing to beat again swelled out its beat into an ear-bursting agony and great lurid light that leapt...
...felt on the future of education is purely a matter of conjecture, but it affords an interesting field for speculation nevertheless. Here is an eight reel moving picture which gives a fairly complete account of the entire development of the state of Massachusetts, and in a manner certainly more graphic than would be a series of lectures on the same subject. Will the college professor of the future be obliged to appear on the screen as well as the lecture platform? It is hard to say, but were such a thing to happen, the present generation of students would have...
Just at present the revolt against the evils of the system seems to be gathering force. The criticism of a Yale English examination made in the World and reprinted elsewhere in these columns is worth the notice of all who have recently had graphic examples in Cambridge of how unsatisfactory examinations...
...land of the Ganges. It did not work very well, everyone admits that, and the Nationalists are demanding with an ever more loud voice that India be granted her independence. So the Simon Commission has made an exhaustive examination of the entire Indian scene. Its published report gives a graphic account of the problem which India presents to her rulers, the second section which will appear June 24 will contain recommendations for a solution...
...books appended to this volume will indicate how much was needed a presentation of Russia's esthetic program since the tumultuous October days of 1917. Only five there listed are exclusively concerned with post-revolution art and literature. Admirably organized, edited and articulated, Voices of October offers a graphic panorama of that part of the Soviet plan. With broad strokes is drawn background of each general division of art in Russia. Follows a statement of the health of that art in 1917; then the slow turning of chaos into the art-propaganda which today dominates Russian esthetics. The time...