Word: itemizes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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With editorials, cartoons and jingles (such as above) the New Orleans States fought the rule of Huey Pierce ("King-fish") Long in Louisiana for the past five years. The wily Kingfish did not take this sort of thing lying down. He won over the Item and Tribune, whose Publisher James Mcllhany Thomson (son-in-law of the late great Champ Clark) had formerly opposed him. by giving the Thomson papers all State advertising, by forcing State employes to subscribe...
Those who persevered to the end of this "column' in last week's CRIMSON will perhaps remember that rather sweeping statement in the last sentence; that almost evry important item in the early history of Harvard College, and in a lesser sense today, has arisen out of grave problems of food supply and demand. This was of course a rash and heartless statement, based on a newspaper man's false notion that the world moves on sentiment and sensation. But before the writer pleads guilty of ignoring the "great underlying forces which have molded Harvard's glorious history" he would...
...That item, buried away on the legal record page of the Washington Post last week, was the only news given capital citizens of the fact that William Randolph Hearst had again been trounced in a libel suit by Frank E. Bonner, onetime executive secretary of the Federal Power Commission. The Washington case was second in a list of actions against 14 Hearstpapers resulting from their syndicated attack three years ago upon Bonner and another Power Commission employe named Frank Warren Griffith as minions of "the Power Trust" (TIME...
...editor of the Muskegon (Mich.) Chronicle marched a townsman named William E. Worthing. Said he: "I have an item for your society page. We're going to have a baby next fall...
...Worthing was indignant. "How about the Tunneys? How about the Lindberghs? How about the Empress of Japan?" The editor was unmoved. To the advertising department marched Mr. Worthing. Next day the Chronicle carried the following paid item...