Word: commenter
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Comment in the U. S. ranged from marked irritation in the New York Times to hardy philosophizing by the Chicago Tribune, which sensibly interpreted the Kipling lines as an aid to international understanding. "What America needs for its protection in foreign affairs is an antidote to the sentimentalism to which we as a people are curiously inclined and which is conspicuously expressed by citizens whose education, position and worldly means give them an influence out of proportion to their deserts." George Washington's Farewell Message was recalled, with its well-known warning to avoid indulging habitual hatred or habitual...
...been a candidate for the CRIMSON less than twenty-four hours was interviewing George M. Cohan in his dressing room at a Boston theatre. and, Mr. Cohan had no idea that he wasn't a veteran of many such interviews. Or if he did, he politely made no comment about it. A day or two later came an interview with Senator Underwood, and a few days thereafter one with Jane Cowl. In each case, the lowly candidate was a representative of the Harvard CRIMSON, the University daily, the only daily newspaper in a city of over a hundred thousand (Advt...
...case in the original guide of last year, the CRIMSON will print a brief comment on each of the more important courses starting in the first half year. Both subject matter in the course and the method of instruction will be reviewed...
Foreign Minister Briand's peremptory demand for the release of Lieutenant Demons continued unheeded last week, a fact which provoked the Journal des Débats to militant comment: "We cannot mince words any longer. An end must be made to this impossible situation. The whole French press, regardless of politics, is aroused over the insulting attitude of the Turks and the weakness displayed by the French Government in the face...
...Emperor Franz Josef spent a sizable fortune in suppressing every sort of evidence and comment. All the servants at Mayerling were paid well to emigrate under assumed names. It is not even known with certainty where the Baroness Vetschera was buried...