Word: summits
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Between 1854 and 1857, under the editorship of James G. Blaine,* the Journal reached the summit of its power. Its influence was tremendous in state politics; and today, under Editor Charles F. Flynt, as one of the oldest newspapers in the country, it strives to uphold its old traditions...
...sometimes think that we should tear down the Statue of Liberty from the summit of this Capitol and place a big black pap bottle in its place. The idea seems to be that the Government is something to which resort is to be incessantly had for the coddling and artificial stimulation of private interests...
...tour of Europe. To many it will be an opportunity of visiting the Europe which, to them, is bounded by the boulevards of Paris, Monte Carlo and its gambling hells, Deauville and San Remo; and if they can see a one-piece bathing suit, they will have achieved the summit of European travel. . . . Every mail brings me seductive circulars...
...much talked of indifference of the case hardened Harvard student is in danger. If plans of a committee interested in the reelection of Senator Walsh are carried out, the spectacle of a Harvard man gesticulating wildly from the summit of a soap box may not be uncommon about the streets of Boston and Cambridge...
...November of this year the Harvard Law Review will enter upon its thirty-eighth volume. The present officers are: President, Robert Guthrie Page 3L., of Madison, Wisconsin; Treasurer. Eli Whitney Debevoise 3L., of Summit, N. J.; Case Editor, Arthur Eugene Sutherland Jr. 3L., of Rochester, N. Y.; Note Editor. Thomas Gardiner Corcoran 3L., of Pawtucket, R. I.; Book Review Editor, Allen Eaton Throop 3L., of Salem, Mass...