Word: column
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...contribution to that column of student opinion styled "The Mail." The title or subject matter of this missive might well "Let Us Be Virtuous" or "There is Work to be Done Before We Sharpen Our Skis" or "Honor His Memory" or "Who More Slothful in Their Inward Turning Gaze Than...
...inconceivable that Queen Elizabeth should ever conduct a syndicated column, but last week it was evident that...
Died. Rodney Butcher, 37, chief of the Washington bureau of N.E.A. (Newspaper Enterprise Association); of heart disease; in Washington. His syndicated column ("Behind the Scenes in Washington") appeared regularly in 750 newspapers, more than any other syndicated column in the world. At the National Press Club's annual dinner in Washington last week (see p. p), President Roosevelt praised twelve newspapermen as "objective" reporters, singled out Rodney Butcher in particular as a "gentleman of the press...
...final irony of Coolidge's life was that he began to catch up on his times only when he was out of office. Retired to Northampton, turning out his autobiography at $5 a word and a short syndicated column at $3.25 a word, brooding disgustedly over Hoover's shortcomings, watching his gilt-edged investments sink lower & lower, Coolidge at last confessed private doubt that "the business of America is business." "In other periods of depression," he admitted, "it has always been possible to see some things which were solid and upon which you could base hope...
...Fact and Rumour" is composed of excerpts from a column by that name published in the "Daily Crimson" 50 years ago. The items are here reproduced as they were printed then. The dates in parentheses indicate the dates of the issues in which the excerpts appeared...