Search Details

Word: journalists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Ratcliffe, English publicist and journalist, will be the speaker at the luncheon of the Harvard Liberal Club of Boston to the given today at 12.45 o'clock in the Colonial Room of the Crawford House. His subject will be "Liberalism and Labor in England...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Club to Hear of English Liberalism | 12/18/1919 | See Source »

Clemenceau as been to France what Roosevelt was to America. He has been a physician of prominence, a war-correspondent, a soldier, a teacher in a girl's seminary at Stamford, Connecticut, a duellist, a critic, a playwright and above all a journalist. Like Roosevelt a firm believer in the big stick, he has clubbed his way to the top by the sheer force of his convictions. He roused the enmity of the socialists by the vigor with which he used the military to quell the mining strikes in the Pas de Calais department in 1906. He fired the wrath...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BROTHERS IN ARMS. | 2/24/1919 | See Source »

...themselves Throughout his life he was a great reader, and what is more a tenacious reader, who liked to break in on other people's specialities with some fresh illumination. He wrote books, many and to the point. In his last years he practiced the art of the journalist, through systematic and incisive articles. Few of the sons of Harvard in the last forty years have left so high or so enduring a monument of literary work in many fields. Roosevelt was the living illustration of what used rather weakly to be called "the scholar in politics". He dignified learning...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE GREATEST HARVARD MAN | 1/7/1919 | See Source »

...Parisian journalist who has been right in the thick of it since the war started is bound to be interesting. The French press has had no small part to play in this great conflict. Upon it has the government depended to a large extent for informing the French people what was going on, and yet keeping up their spirit and resolution. As may be expected, this was a difficult task, for with German hordes pouring in upon them, with a horrible and thorough war being fought on their territory, the French people could not be salved into determination by honeyed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: M. LAUZANNE | 4/26/1918 | See Source »

...even so far as the arts of the world are now dragging in the dust, so then they will be raised to a standard as high as they are now low. The engineer and the architect will rebuild broken material Europe, the teacher, the philosopher, the sociologist and the journalist must rebuild the minds of the nations, downtrodden in the struggle with a material might. To plant the flowers and the joys of life again we must not lose from our hands those blue birds of happiness--poetry, painting, and philosophy. Michigan Daily...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 3/18/1918 | See Source »

| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | Next