Word: carlson
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...penalties. Well short of the Byczynski gross but a shade ahead of his net was the score of a long-faced, 38-year-old Iowan who, dressed in tennis shoes, white duck pants and an undershirt, had husked his rows more slowly but with scrupulous care. He was Carl Carlson, brother of famed Elmer, who did not bother to defend his title this year. Carl Carlson's gross of 1,540 lb. left him with a net of 1,472 lb. and the 1936 championship...
Worcester--g., Ostberg; r.f., Tom Carlson; l.f., Nelson; r.h., Lundquist; c.h., W. Ferrie; l.h., Ewen, Reed; r.o., J. Ferrie, Tog Carlson; r.i., Anderson; c., Olson; l.i., Berness; l.o., Larson, Johnson...
Hearst v. Spain. Carlson & Bates: "William R. Hearst ... in 1898, almost solely for the private profit of William R. Hearst, succeeded in prodding this country into a wholly unnecessary war. ... It was the first instance of that effective use of newspaper propaganda on a large scale which has become one of the most familiar features of the twentieth century." Mrs. Older: "Hearst was the flaming crusader for the Pearl of the Antilles. He challenged Bourbon tyranny. He determined to drive Spain from this hemisphere. . . . Without Hearst Cuba might still be under the heel of Spain...
Hearst v. Intellectuals. In 1934 Publisher Hearst was granted an audience with Nazi Germany's Reichsführer Adolf Hitler, chatted with many another Nazi bigwig. Biographers Lundberg, Carlson & Bates believe the German junket explains Mr. Hearst's subsequent journalistic forays against pinko professors at Syracuse, Chicago, Columbia and New York Universities. "One of the first lessons he had learned from his German mentor was the importance of terrorizing the faculties of colleges and universities."-Carlson & Bates. "Since his German trip, Hearst has been very preoccupied with students."- Lundberg...
...life he has worked on behalf of death-the death of personal integrity, the death of decent journalism,the death of honest patriotism-and now ultimately death will take its own."-Carlson & Bates...