Word: mediumly
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...have any ideas on these subjects, if you have ideas on any other subjects, the CRIMSON furnishes the only regular medium for their expression at Harvard. Each promising candidate will receive careful individual attention, and suggestions in the technique of writing. The competition itself opens up a field of personal contacts within the university which the undergraduate must commonly leave unexplored; most men agree that it is a valuable and a stimulating experience. Members of the class of 1935 who have entered competitions in the past, as well as those who may be interested in the CRIMSON for the first...
...student will be ashamed to come unprepared. Those only are tutees who have the will and the ability to do tutorial work. The prestige of such work has been raised by making it a privilege. And finally, it has been given definite recognition by the University through the medium of reports which carry all the weight of grades...
...selected to control Treasury news was Herbert E. Gaston, onetime night editor of the defunct New York World, who helped found the liberal Federated Press service as a medium for labor news. Even the fact that an experienced and liberal minded confrere had been given the job was not enough to make the correspondents believe Mr. Morgenthau's disavowal of censorship. Always quick to resent such tactics the correspondents promptly expressed their feelings in a letter to President Roosevelt at Warm Springs: "We . . . formally protest against the rigid restrictions imposed by Mr. Morgenthau. . . . The Secretary's order includes...
When Le Sang d'un Poet-Novelist Jean Cocteau's effort to use cinema as a medium for autobiographical poetry-opened in Paris last year its consequences were even more extraordinary than its contents. The audience at the premiere, expecting a conventional program picture, engaged in a riot. Royalists, always on the qui vive for a disturbance, attacked it for reasons of their own. His was not the only well-known Parisian name connected with Le Sang d'un Poet. Its heroine was Lee Miller, famed both as a photographer and as a model, whom Cocteau...
Your program, gentlemen, is quite the finest thing on the air. It is, I think, the only attempt to handle the medium of the radio with subtlety and color I know of. Invariably I find in it a filling of the senses, a spur to the imagination. You are making serious dramatic history...