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...time is overripe for the establishment of a Dry newspaper, and lots of people are thinking about it." Last week the subject again became news when the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, meeting in Pittsburgh, commended the efforts "of a group of substantial citizens . . . to establish and maintain a national daily newspaper to be published in metropolitan New York, the same to be distinctively Christian in its spirit and outlook. . . . The proposals . . . that it stand squarely for Prohibition, support every cause of political, economic and social righteousness, keep its news columns clean and trustworthy and its advertising space open...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Christian Daily | 6/15/1931 | See Source »

...opened at the Fogg Museum before the beginning of the next college year, a collection of etchings, engravings, woodcuts, and lithographs, has been arranged in Gallery Four, and will be ready for public view tomorrow. It will be kept on display throughout the summer, during which the museum will maintain its usual hours...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOGG ART MUSEUM OPENS NEW EXHIBIT TOMORROW | 6/5/1931 | See Source »

...Wordsworth into the poetic niche of the normally abnormal. Professor Read finds in the key to the true Wordsworth, the well of his poetic emotion. Professor Herford, on the other hand, looks upon the life of the poet with the cold, green eye of pedantic scholarship. He manages to maintain his equilibrium as far as Wordsworth's sex life is concerned, but his contributions as a critic are as negligible as they are traditional...

Author: By H. A. R., | Title: BOOKENDS | 6/3/1931 | See Source »

...home, the Vagabond was not sorry. He has never been what the middle west vulgarly calls "collegiate," but he is a sentimentalist--which is a refined collegiatism. He was glad to see that men who have left the gates of Harvard two and three years behind can still maintain that joy of youth which is the graduate's greatest heritage. It was reassuring to know that adolescense is immortal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Student Vagabond | 5/26/1931 | See Source »

...must resist attempts to reduce wages, even though it may be necessary for workers to go on strike." At the White House conferences in the first days of the Depression, Mr. Green had pledged Labor not to strike for higher pay in return for Industry's promise to maintain existing wage scales. Now he suspected Industry of beginning to break its promise. He felt labor would thus be automatically released from its no-strike pledge. Cited was the fact that the 1921 Depression produced 2,400 strikes whereas this one has witnessed less than 40, most of them small...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Strikes v. Wage-Cuts | 5/25/1931 | See Source »

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