Search Details

Word: pressingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...allow its neighbors to become bored. Not content with assuming the financial obligations of half the world, the Germans have decided to dig a little deeper into their pockets and their Fatherland. Having stumbled on an odd billion or so (marks not dollars), they have, according to an Associated. Press dispatch, organized a canal corporation at Munich to construct a two thousand mile waterway by joining the Rhine, the Main and the Danube. The engineering details will tax the German imagination as much as the Allied Reparation Demands will tax their pocket books; but there seems to be as little...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HIGH TIDE IN THE ALPS | 1/4/1922 | See Source »

...wonder then that the press blazed away with the sensational news of her naval demands. It did not understand the French and their ways, while the French did not understand the press and its possibilities. Mr. Abbott's article restores our previous optimism. France is not insincere and she does not intend to block progress. She has made an unfortunate mistake by misunderstanding the environment that has done much to accomplish things in Washington; let us not make an even more unfortunate mistake by misunderstanding France and her motives...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRENCH DEMANDS | 12/22/1921 | See Source »

...Abbott's article on the Conference published in this issue of the CRIMSON is one of the most interesting of the series. When the press suddenly announced last week that, after the naval ratio of the Big Three had been finally settled satisfactorily, France had turned the whole business topsy-turvy by asking for an increased navy, the news came as somewhat of a shock. All progress at Washington seemed to be in a fair way of being checked. The feeling of optimism that had spread over the country gave way to one of blank amazement. What did the French...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRENCH DEMANDS | 12/22/1921 | See Source »

...Abbott points out, their doubts and fears are not warranted. What France did was the result of a mental habit entirely different from that of the other nations at the Conference. Where they have been only too glad to reach public opinion through the newspapers, she has given the press correspondents no idea of her true position. Where they have eagerly put their problems before the readers of the country, she, because her newspapers are different, thought her "case could wait until it was presented by diplomats to diplomats." The extraordinary role that the public has played in the proceedings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FRENCH DEMANDS | 12/22/1921 | See Source »

...like so many other industries, develop its vested interests and its propaganda? Will junk barons buy up newspapers to preach the cause of international peace? Will second-hand dynamo lobbies try to put over disarmament jokers on Parliaments and Congresses? Will venal correspondents and news agencies flood the press of the world with fakes about peace banquets in Tokio, international meetings in London, interracial resolutions of friendship in Rome, all provocative of unity among the nations and designed to build up the scraping industry? More power to them! -New York Evening Post...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 12/15/1921 | See Source »