Word: presse
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Packard refers to the British press as "Government and Peer-subsidized." Will TIME please devote the necessary ½ of an inch of space to a list of the U. S. A. newspapers which are not at the heel of one or other of your political parties...
...blank cartridge fired against a blank wall"President Hoover heard that that was how potent Publisher William Randolph Hearst described the Hoover speech to the Associated Press on law enforcement...
...successive days no small divergence in interpreting events at Geneva widened between correspondents on the spot and the press officials of the U. S. State Department. The former developed a pessimistic and the latter an optimistic view of chances that the Powers would agree to reduction of armaments. "Mischievous" became official Washington's adjective to describe what was coming over the cables. Finally the views of the President were made known in the following sense...
While General Gouraud was discussing abominations in Belgium, a noted French journalist, M. Ernest Judet was disclosing in the Paris press some interesting facts about the first gas attack...
...they are given no information, they should at least be spared the misapprehensions and irritations which are the natural outcome of misinformation." The CRIMSON declares Harvard has lost the enrollment of hundreds of worthy men who have been attracted to other universities as a result of misrepresentations in the press and popular traditions bred out of such misrepresentations and her endowment has lost substantial sums from graduates who have been outraged by unfavorably colored news...