Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Like many other s who have succeeded in the political game, Mr. Nichols started his career as a journalist, working as a reporter for the old Boston Record and then for the Boston Post and the Boston Traveler. It was in these years of his journalistic career that he first became acquainted with the work of the office he will hold for the next four years. For several years he reported political news exclusively, and in this work made many friendships which aided him in his later battles...
...Eaton, besides being the author of many books on out-of-door life, is a dramatic journalist of considerable repute. Following his graduation in 1900, Mr. Eaton immediately became a reporter for the Boston Journal. Since then he has been dramatic critic for the New York Tribune, and the New York Sun. At present he is on the staff of the American Magazine, and often contributes to H. L. Mencken's American Mercury...
...since last January, when F. P. Collier and E. E. Whiting '97 addressed the University, has a journalist been given the platform at the Union. Tomorrow night at 7.30 o'clock, the third journalist to speak in the Living Room of the Union, Mr. Neal O'Hara '15, of the Boston Herald-Traveler, will deliver a talk on humorists in the Living Room...
...contributed an article supporting for the rectorship his veteran friend of many Fabian battles, Sidney Webb,* sometime Labor Cabinet member and President of the Board of Trade. As the two other candidates were Austen Chamberlain, His Majesty's Secretary for Foreign Affairs, and Gilbert Keith Chesterton, famed Author-Journalist, Mr. Shaw did not lack distinguished targets for his shafts...
...hands of the Press, II Benito received not even formal courtesy. As a protest against Fascismo's actions in maintaining a strangling censorship on all Italian news and even expelling a foreign journalist from Italy, over 100 journalists, representing a majority of the chief newspapers of the world, completely boycotted Mussolini when he announced that he would read a prepared statement to the Press, but would answer no questions...