Word: journalistic
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Tonight at 8 o'clock, there will be a lecture in the Living Room of the Union by Nicholas W. Tchaykovsky and Alexis Aladyin, alded by Mr. Kellog Durland, a well-known American journalist. The object of the lecture is to discourage further financial aid to the Russian government...
...Riis, the writer of this article, is a well-known journalist and author, the instigator of many reforms in New York in tenement house and school administrations, and an ardent supporter of movements for securing small parks and playgrounds. Among his books are "The Making of an American," "How the Other Half Lives," "The Children of the Poor," "The Battle of the Slum," "Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen...
...Riis who has written the article to be published tomorrow is known as journalist and author. He was born in Denmark in 1849, and came to this country while still a boy. He was well known for years as police reporter of the New York Sun, and he has always been most active in the small parks and play grounds movement, and in securing reforms in tenement house and school administrations. Among his books are, "How the Other Half Lives," "The Children of the Poor," "Nibsy's Christmas," "Out of Mulberry Street," "The Battle with the Slum," "Theodore Roosevelt...
...Bernard Shaw: His Plays," Mencken. "The Yellow Journalist," Michelson. "The Life of Goethe," Bielschowsky. "Who's Who," 1906. "History of Criticism," Saintsbury. "The Pardoner's Waller," Crothers. "Voyages," Purchas "Princess Priscilla's Fortnight," Pless. "The Oxford Dante," Moore. "England under the Normans and Angevins," Davis. "Conquest of Cannan," Tarkington. "Cambridge," (medieval town series), Stubbs. Samtliche Werke, Goethe. Almanack, Hachette, 1906. British Almanack, 1906. Stieler's Hand-atlas...
...December, 1879, just twenty-five years ago, appeared a number of the Harvard Advocate with which the writer had some relation. A comparison with the Christmas Advocate of 1904 suggests some interesting changes in the point of view of the college journalist. The old Advocate was distinctly a newspaper, and to a large degree, a Harvard newspaper; of the twelve pages of the issue, less than one was given to advertising, but it had two pages of editorials and three solid pages of brief correspondence, College news, "Lies of the Week," and so on. There were then no dailies...