Word: propagandistic
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...Freeman is known as "Honorary Consul-General of Haiti." At the Bal Boheme in Washington last year he and his party enacted in tableau the discovery of Haiti, Mr. Free man impersonating Christopher Columbus in elaborate costume and shell-rimmed spectacles. He once invited Emma Gold man, radical propagandist, to lecture on Communism in his East Orange, N. J. home but the meeting was thwarted by police. In 1918 he converted his home into a hospital for wounded soldiers, cared for 1,000 in three years. Last year in Manhattan, he entertained at a large dinner Nan Britton...
...social justice throughout the world. If, however, he were 'dedicated to a sense of his own importance,' it would not be so surprising, considering how many editors and critics are 'dedicated' to a sense of his unimportance." Slight, professional, Upton Sinclair is an unremitting propagandist for himself and Socialism. When he talks his face is bright with a fanatic smile; he writes with humorless conviction. Eastern-bred, he lives in Pasadena, has twice run as Socialist candidate for Governor of California. Other books: The Jungle, The Brass Check, The Goose-Step, Oil!, Boston...
...country has had the literary wind knocked out of her so badly as Russia. For years after the War nothing escaped her epileptically clenched teeth but the mutter of revolutionary debate. Lately she has disgorged a few novels, most of them drearily propagandist, which have been filtered into translation. Quiet Street, a novel about Russians?not Communists, not Mensheviki, not Whites?is perhaps a sign that she is regaining her literary faculties...
...Gilbert (The Seats of the Mighty) Parker arrived in the U. S. and began the backbreaking work of British propaganda in the U. S. which in 1917-18 was to develop into the most tremendous propaganda organization in the world under the late Lord Northcliffe and the master propagandist and secret service organizer, Sir William Wiseman...
Edward John Thompson is no name to place beside those of the great War propagandists. He is a poet, novelist, War veteran (Military Cross, mentioned in despatches), lecturer in Bengali at Oxford. He has written a history of India. He has served as an "educational missionary" at Bankura College, Bengal. He has written many a page expressing sympathy with the aspirations of Indian "Moderates." Doubtless well qualified to write about India, his character as a propagandist is, however, scarcely up to the standard of the great London Times. Last week's pamphlet exhibits an ignorance...