Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...long ago the famed novelist-historian H. G. Wells picked up a fat autobiography entitled Seventy Summers, by one Poultney Bigelow, aged U. S. journalist-lecturer, son of a former U. S. Ambassador to France...
There are two gentlemen in Congress whose importance increased by leaps and bounds last week. One is a journalist with a bloc. The other is a lawyer with a bloc. In each case the bloc is a farm bloc. One of them is Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas; the other is Representative L. J. Dickinson of Iowa...
Following two years of teaching journalism he again entered the field himself as a member of the editorial staff of the journalist's magazine, Printer's Ink. From 1919 until 1923 he was connected with the New York Globe successively as chief editorial writer, managing editor, and associate editor. Since leaving the New York Globe he has been a member of the editorial staff of the New Republic. His articles appear regularly in all the leading magazines of the country and he is now Director of the Foreign Policy Association of New York...
Stupid Press Rapped. "A basic knowledge of scientific subjects is vitally necessary to the journalist if he is to avoid constant mistakes in his work. "Even the graduates of our best schools of journalism are untrained in the natural sciences. The typical journalist is grossly ignorant of music, architecture, painting and literature. His knowledge of esthetic principles is little above that of the average policeman. He emerges from the university blind to the best things of life, and he will blind his readers to them"-Professor Nelson Antrim Crawford, Kansas State Agricultural College...
...Great Journalist...