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Word: nationalism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...simple, hometown ceremony. But next June?! Next June, President Coolidge, the great man of the present hour, will visit Marion and make a speech. He will help Marion and the Nation dedicate the Harding sepulchre, even as President Roosevelt entered Ohio in September, 1907, to make a speech at Canton and dedicate what was then "Ohio's Shrine", the sepulchre of William McKinley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Ohio | 1/2/1928 | See Source »

...brilliant, unkempt figure of Heywood Broun lumbered back into the newspaper business again last week. For four months Mr. Broun has been writing for The Nation (which avers his contributions added 7,000 readers); other weeklies and monthlies. In August the famed columnist struck when the World refused to print columns on Sacco-Vanzetti. Bright exponent of "personal journalism," he demanded the right to write what he please. By contract obligations to the World he was helpless to write for newspapers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Broun Back | 1/2/1928 | See Source »

...among the best known in Soviet history and there are dark reasons why they may become so again. Of the 98 expelled, last week, three rank as at least second string great men in Russia: 1) Christian Rakovsky, recently recalled as Ambassador to France at the request of that nation, which feared him as a tireless fomenter of "The Revolution of the World Proletariat"; 2) Karl Radek, probably the most brilliant publicist of the third international (bureau for world Communist propaganda); 3) Lev Borisovitch Kemenev, onetime holder of numerous offices approximating "cabinet rank" in the Soviet Government. That these...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Political Execution | 12/26/1927 | See Source »

...libel suits by partly blotting out names which yet remain identifiable by the associates of the men traduced-that publisher is a disgrace to the profession." Since one of the Hearst documents purports that $25,000 was "ordered paid" from Mexican sources to Editor Oswald Garrison Villard of The Nation, he quietly took occasion to reproduce that document in facsimile, last week, in The Nation's cover. In an unruffled article The Nation said: "We are aware, of course, that the Senators look upon the entire series as impudent but unskilled forgeries and that they joked about them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Good Business? | 12/26/1927 | See Source »

Engaged. Miss Mariquita S. Villard, niece of Editor Oswald Garrison Villard of The Nation, to Louis Warren Hill Jr., of St. Paul, Minn., who now functions with the Great Northern Railway, built by his grandfather, the late famed James Jerome Hill, and of which his father, Louis Warren Hill, is chairman of the Board of Directors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Dec. 26, 1927 | 12/26/1927 | See Source »

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