Word: londoners
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Perhaps not with unmixed feelings did Mr. Coolidge read the caustic comment of the London Daily News, as cabled to the U.S. press...
John St. Loe, Strachey, editor of the London Spectator, which is known as "England's most influential periodical," will tonight give an address in the Living Room of the Union. The London editor will be given as small dinner at the Union, and will afterwards talk on "Literary Revolt". Mr. Strachey's talk will start at 7.30 o'clock...
Tonight's speaker is a graduate of Oxford, where he studied at Balliol. Since 1884, he has been engaged in journalism in London. From 1896-97, Mr. Strachey was editor of the Cornhill Magazine, and since 1897, he has been with the Spectator, whose list of editors he now heads. He has written books on various subjects, most of them on economics and sociological subjects. "The Madonna at the Barricades," his latest literary effort, is on the present generation...
...large domed Festival Hall, superficially resembling the U.S. Capitol at Washington, dominates a be-fountained lagoon, serves as a focus for the Expositional activities, and is expected to reverberate nightly to the syncopations of the noted Argyll and Sutherland jazz band, which New Zulanders boast of having lured from London at a cost ?5,000 greater than the total Dominion grant to the Exposition...
While the Lord Mayor of London was dining British notables (see COMMONWEALTH), Field-marshal President von Hindenburg of the Reich journeyed to Stuttgard and was received with acclaim by its Lord Mayor and 30,000 Württembergers, who paraded and goose-stepped before...