Word: reviews
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Fleet?98 ships of war, Admiral Charles Frederick Hughes commanding. From the ships came the President's salute (21 guns), from the Mayflower the signal "Well Done"?the navy's formula of highest praise. U. S. President for some four years, President Coolidge had held his first naval review...
...morning some six weeks ago, 37 good years were marred by one allegedly negligent moment. It was during the naval review in New York Harbor (TIME, May 9). Between Governor's Island and the Battery the Colorado bumped, stopped, stuck fast on Diamond Reef, remained there 36 hours...
...Comfortably-built Christopher Morley lately spoke, on his "Bowling Green" in the Saturday Review of Literature, of "two stout, elderly, ruddy nabobs . . . the two rotund conductors, Tweedledum and Tweedledee" whom he, during a Chicago-to-New York trip on the Century, saw conferring on the LaSalle Street and Elkhart, Ind., platforms. N. Y. Central men are agreed that Mr. Morley must have seen Conductors Hendrix and Jefferey, of whom only one, however, might be called stout, rotund? Conductor Jefferey. (Conductor Lund may have been Tweedledee to Conductor Jefferey's Tweedledum; he is heavier than Conductor Hendrix. But between Conductors Lund...
...nine papers which remain in the contest were announced last night as the Mercersburg News, the Choate News, the Hotchkiss Record, the Hill School News, the Taft Papyrus, the Loomis Log, the Riverdale Review, the Exonian, and the Peddie News. Most of the sample issues submitted by these papers were printed at various times during the year. Each of them will be read carefully by all of the judges, rediuked according to the traditional custom of the CRIMSON, and finally judged. With the red-inked papers will be sent critical suggestions by the judges to the editors of each...
Governor Fuller deserves praise for his latest decision in the review of the Sacco-Vanzetti case, both because he has seen fit to seek unofficial advice and because of the excellence of his choice. The three men chosen are eminently "respectable"--with no tinge of radicalism, no public favor to seek, and no political axe to grind. One of them is himself a member of the judiciary; another has been a member of the bar; all are men of many interests, without the fatal taint of narrowmindedness. Their appointment should reassure all but those who want the "dignity...