Word: newspapermen
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Last week he opened his mouth. Occasionally reports of his remarks have appeared in Collier's Weekly, but rarely has he given interviews to newspapermen. Four years ago he gave an interview to correspondent Wilbur Forrest. Nowadays Mr. Forrest lives in Paris?as correspondent of The New York Herald-Tribune. But he has been home on vacation. So he traveled to Dearborn, Mich., and elaborated two days' interviews into four articles that appeared last week...
...Coolidge motored to Lake Attitash, 35 miles away, to attend an outing of Essex County newspapermen and politicians. A Mr. Bauer, candidate for Mayor of Lynn, was host. Governor Fuller was there. So was Senator Butler, candidate for reelection. It was a get-together meeting of Senator Butler's followers and those of the late Senator Lodge-hitherto hostile. Mr. Coolidge circulated through the crowd shaking hands, and climbed a 40-ft. wooden observation tower, issuing a warning for not too many people to follow him lest it collapse. ¶ On returning to White Court, Mr. Coolidge found Secretary...
This pathetic action is in the eyes of newspapermen one of the heights of nobility-a height to which all aspire if they should ever be thrust into a similar situation. For them, it ranks with the heroism of the telephone girl who sticks to her post in a fire, is parallel to,the devotion to duty of the old Roman who executed his own son for disobeying military commands...
...last meeting of the Cabinet, one last conference with newspapermen, and President Coolidge and his wife left the White House to the mercies of repairers and redecorators for two months. At 1.05 p. m. the Bar Harbor Express pulled out of the Union Station, Washington. The first section, comprised of a baggage car, a diner, a compartment car for correspondents, a regular Pullman (the Lake Felicity) for the Coolidges and their immediate retinue, and an observation car, carried the party...
...devil come to their elbow suggesting that there was too much copy to fill their papers, that their editorials had best be cast out. They would have shouted: "Throw away the rest and save the editorials!" They were journalists conducting great journals. Today, we have newspapers run by newspapermen...