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Word: notebooks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Perhaps Helen Wills is keeping a diary of what she does these sunny days at Cannes. It is rumored that she makes entries every evening in a large notebook bound in red morocco and fitted with a silver clasp-lock, whose contents a U. S. publisher has contracted to bring out in the fall. If Miss Wills is really writing a diary, her many admirers are likely to read it more for its probable charm than in the expectation of finding out anything new about her, for the newspapers have reported her activities so elaborately that what she puts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Diary | 2/8/1926 | See Source »

...consequence, we apply it to matters that can never be reduced to formulas and cold logic. Human life is only partially rational. And by considering it wholly so, much of our education has become so much fact and circumstances dumped out of the dusty confines of some pedant's notebook and abandoned by him like so many blasted stumps on a sand-dune, completely severed from life and all things living. We are just awakening to the fact that by neglecting the imaginative and spiritual side of life, much of our education has reached an advanced stage...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BEAN PORRIDGE HOT | 1/15/1926 | See Source »

...either a passionate pilgrim or a fervent admirer of the sheer literary skill of slender, drooping, cynical Mr. Huxley. Here he is less cynical than usual, for he is traveling, enjoying himself, not trying particularly to be clever. In Rotterdam, Mantua, Siena, Munich, Monte Carlo, he idly employs his notebook to jot notes which will keep his warm coat of culture sleek and glossy. He takes the usual liberties?writing about his spectacles, the books he takes, Why Not Stay Home, etc.?but still he is Mr. A. Huxley, one of the more intelligent phrasemakers of our time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Parthenogenesis * | 10/26/1925 | See Source »

...rest of the exhibit consists of two small notebooks, describing a journey in the Congo during June and July, 1890. One contains notes of a march neross country with perters and native guides. The other tells of a trip by boat on the Congo River. Of unusual interest in the second notebook are the precise directions given for passing from point to point. How suags and shoals are to be avoided is also clearly set forth. Both books are in the anthor's own hand...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONRAD MANUSCRIPTS ON EXHIBITION AT WIDENER | 10/19/1925 | See Source »

Acting upon the recommendation in this report orders have been placed with the Cooperative Society for paper and notebook covers which will make it possible to secure a certain amount of standardization. In addition, provision has been made to have all mimeographed work handed out in the standard size and with the standard punching. This will take effect as soon as the present stocks of mimeographed paper are used...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRITICISM COMMITTEE OF BUSINESS SCHOOL GIVES PLAN | 10/13/1922 | See Source »

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