Word: londoners
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Some of these Legionnaires will be running over to London for a week or two, and I would suggest now that they stop in and see if there is such a member of the London Author's Club as Mr. Cyril D. H. G. Dillington-Dowse who wrote you a letter of such foul criticism on the club stationery (TIME, June 13). My blood still boils when I remember his sneering reference to "The Yanks, a nation ... by no means of the first rank, who . . . found themselves in 1914-18 too proud to fight...
...Daily News (London): "President Coolidge is fed up, as Mr. Baldwin, a man very like him, notoriously is fed up and M. Briand in Prance, a man very unlike him, also...
...made Britain seem far more the "enemy" in U. S. eyes than at any time within the present century. That this new ill-feeling is reciprocated by Britons was to be inferred last week from a savage editorial attack on the U. S. delegation by the usually urbane London Times...
...majesty, Ahmed Fuad I, King of Egypt, was returning home last week from his state visit at London to the King and Emperor George V (TiME, July 18). King Fuad's route lay from Paris, where he had spent several quiet days, to Rome where he was feted last week by King Vittorio Emanuele and Premier Benito Mussolini...
...lecture tour during which he would wear only prison garb and would denounce British prison methods "from every platform in the land"; 2) the founding of a newspaper, "for which my backers have ready £100,000, gentlemen." 3) publication (which subsequently took place last week in the London Dispatch) of an entire front-page story of his wrongs, plus an entire back page of pictures showing him plump before he went to jail and cadaverous today...