Word: journalists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Hannington, 30, engineer. John Ross Campbell, Editor of the Workers' Weekly; Arthur McManus, head of the colonial department of the Communist Party; John Thomas Murphy, head of its political bureau ; Robert Page Arnot, director of the Labor Research Department; E. W. Cant, Communist organizer; Thomas W. Wintringham, journalist; Thomas Bell, engineer...
...college, at least in life. His calling is hard. The need of improving it remains the ghost in American academic closets. But if he is a true teacher he will enjoy it--enjoy it far more than Mr. Sherman--who is evidently more of a journalist than a faculty member. Indeed, to that inimitable essayist and Puritan, one must remark "Professor, How Could...
John St. Loe Strachey, prominent British journalist and editor, will speak at the Union on Friday night, it was announced late last night by the Union management. His topic has been tentatively set as "Literary Revolt". Technicalities of literary style will not figure prominently in Mr. Strachey's talk, according to present plans...
...Strachey is a graduate of Oxford, where he took first class honors in history at Balliol College. Immediately following his graduation at Oxford, Mr. Strachey figured first as a journalist, and from 1896-97 as editor of the Corn-hill Magazine. Since 1897 he has been connected with the Spectator, the control of which has made him famous for the last ten years...
Echoes of Mr. Barkis' famed remark* were heard last week, when citizens of Yarmouth expressed themselves as not only willing but anxious to name one of their streets "Barkis Road" by way of tribute to famed author-journalist Charles Dickens...