Word: journalists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Here was a murder difficult of classification; possible motives, innumerable "angles," sprawled like tentacles through the redolent demimonde of Los Angeles politics. The memory of Chicago's Racketeer-Reporter Jake Lingle was still too fresh to allow a repetition in Journalist Spencer's case of the public error of canonizing him too soon as a martyr, a public crusader like Canton, Ohio's revered Editor Don R. Mellett...
...Lord Cushendun, haven't you heard? I am a Russian now. My husband is assistant commissar of foreign affairs." As though stung by a hornet, Lord Cushendun recoiled, never thereafter greeted Mme Litvinov more enthusiastically than by a curt nod. From the London standpoint she is a Tory journalist gone wrong, and "Mr. Harrison" should have remained a traveling salesman...
...fashioned governess in a very old fashioned cathedral town. . . . You will lose your power over the public mind and a great deal of that is already passing to the radio. . . . People for whom we write have never seen us or heard our voices, and I often think a journalist in a city should be made to go around in a large cart as if in a circus and people would say, 'Great respect. Look...
...Author, No German but a U. S. citizen (he served as lieutenant of artillery in the A. E. F.), Eugene Löhrke, 33, Williams undergraduate when the War broke out, after the war served his term as journalist on the New York Sun, New York Evening Post, New Republic. Married, he lives in Manhattan, has written one other book. Overshadowed, collaborated on another, Jungle Gods...
Apropos the Sir Hubert Wilkins-Ellsworth Expedition to the North Pole (TIME, March 23), mention has not been made of The Great Stone of Sardis written in 1891 by Frank Richard Stockton, journalist and literateur...