Word: columns
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...quote you from the irrepressible Walter Winchell's column of Sept...
...squadrons whose mission was to wreak frightfulness on German cities in retaliation for Zeppelin raids over Britain, a dangerous duty little reported in the British Press. In the army leather-lunged Lord Trenchard was known as "Boom," because of his reputed ability to turn an entire brigade into a column of fours without the aid of a megaphone or relayed commands. Last week Lord Boom, successor to Lord Byng, spared the ears of the Press by saying nothing at all, sailed for Canada on a business trip. He is expected to take up his duties at Scotland Yard...
...Column, "News from the Houses", beginning in today's issue of the CRIMSON will be a regular feature from now on. It will attempt to chronicle every little incident of interest which occurs in any of the Houses. Since it is not possible for members of the staff to learn of all happenings, the CRIMSON will appreciate any items which may be contributed...
...four essays selected out of the twenty that were considered are: "William Chilling worth, and the Theory of Toleration," by J. D. Hyman '31, recommened by the department of History and Literature; "The Broken Column," by H. T. Levin '33, who was awarded the first Bowdoin Prize; "The New England Fur Trade," by F. X. Moloney '31, submitted by the Department of History, and "The Problem of Pricing in a Socialistic State," by W. C. Roper Jr. '31, who concentrated in Economics...
Many a reader of the McCormick-Patterson tabloid New York Daily News, like many a reader of any newspaper, skips the editorials. But one day last week the News's editorial column was calculated to arrest the most cursory eye. On it appeared the picture of a pudgy male, clad only in underdrawers, squatting Gandhi-fashion at a spinning wheel. The body was the body of any corpulent, middle-aged man but the head was the head of Herbert Hoover...