Word: columnists
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...philosophy (which was finally put into effect in March 1942) assumed that inflation can be stopped just by proclaiming that all prices are frozen as of a given date. But, as Columnist Walter Lippmann argued last week, the idea that a general price freeze will be effective is pure illusion...
...them there, and they had high suspicions. Their suspicions were all the Washington press needed. They remembered the "little green house on K Street" where President Harding's Ohio Gang hung out, the "little red house in Georgetown" where the aboriginal New Dealers schemed their schemes. Paced by Columnist Drew Pearson of the Washington Post, the press laid back its ears and bayed. Pages slopped over with heavy headlines...
...deliberately twisted fact and his tory to put the rosiest of all possible lights on U.S.-Soviet relations, the way to improve those relations? Was it fair and honest to present such a distortion of momentous events to the U.S. people as final truth? In unusual accord, critics, historians, columnists answered "No." Only all-out praise came from Communists. The New Masses thought it "just about a perfect film . . . [which] strips away the veils of illusions and lies." Daily Worker Columnist Mike Gold found it "about the best propaganda picture I've ever seen . . . patriotic, fearless...
...been suggested that this film needs cutting," wrote Columnist Dorothy Thompson. "It does-indefinitely...
...ever keeps score; Hearst covers the court only to arm's length each way and it is taken for granted that the ball must be hit within his reach.) Birthday dinner guests were Marion Davies, four Hearst sons and their wives, a handful of Hearst publishers, Movie Columnist Louella Parsons, ex-Georgian Prince David Mdivani, Film Actor Arthur (Dogwood Bumstead) Lake, several others. They nibbled a red and white cake (16 candles...