Word: editting
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...dewy youth passed and Alfred approached 60, he began thinking of foreign parts again. In the early '90s he went to Malaya to edit a paper, moved on to Japan to become European editor of Tokyo's Japan Times. In 1899, just after the beginning of Philippine-U.S. hostilities, Alfred arrived in Manila. Filipinos arrested the ambitious newshawk of 71 as a spy, left him bound and stripped in the jungle to be slowly devoured by flies. U.S. troops rescued him. Later he went to the U.S., worked on a San Francisco paper...
...friends were more specific. Said one of them: "You know he went off the deep end for a while. But Verne's all right now, and he's sorry for all the things he's done." Still rumorous were the reasons Verne Marshall never returned to edit after his expensive isolationist spree. (He had put up about $55,000 for full-page ads for the No Foreign War Committee.) More certain was the strong opposition to Marshall's steaming isolationist propaganda on page one of the Gazette, particularly on the part of Cedar Rapids' large...
John P. Elder, to edit the Virgilian works of Remigius of Auxerre, and the so-called Vatican Mythographers...
...sponsored broadcast when played at New Haven. Yale gets $37,500 annually-a sum which would just fit that hole in the H.A.A. budget-and there is good reason to believe that the Crimson could do as well as the Blue. Harvard, as Yale already does, could edit and control the sponsor's blurb before it went on the air waves. "Commercialization" has nothing to do with the problem-the choice lies between a good business deal and a malnourished athletic program...
...Russian ballet-14 weeks-the city had ever seen. Balustrade, like the ballets of the old days in Paris, was a pudding of the several arts. The music was by Igor Stravinsky, and conducted by him. It was his Violin Concerto, played by Samuel Dush-kin, who helped "edit" it ten years ago and is about the only fiddler who ever saws it through. The choreography was by George Balanchine (born Balanchivadze in Russian Georgia), who never tires of finding things for legs to do. The scenery and costumes, mostly black, white and silvery grey, were by plausible Artist Paul...