Word: subjected
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Particularly do I wish to voice my admiration of the editors who handle your FOREIGN NEWS. The pointed, condensed methods used are excellent. Your weekly words about the China situation are splendid. Congratulations to your China Editor, whom I would really like to know some day, for his subject happens also to be my hobby. I must wish you "Ten Thousand Years...
...Cunningham's theories, the Bureau of Investigation of the American Medical Association (directed by Dr. Arthur J. Cramp) has stated: "There is not the slightest scientific evidence to support the thesis on which the Cunningham treatment rests. As independent investigators have never checked up on the subject (for reasons that are rather obvious-namely, the tremendous expense of the apparatus) there is nothing to support Dr. Cunningham's statements or theories except his own unsupported word.... It is our personal belief that Dr. Cunningham, at any rate at the outset, was perfectly sincere and honest in his belief...
...cheer news reef pictures of the "boys" off for the trenches and to curse the "Boche" and the "Hun". This week Mr. and Mrs. Smith sat through and obviously enjoyed a moving picture whose here is a German prisoner of war, whose villain is a French officer, whose subject is the mean absurdity of all war and war spirit. "Barbed Wire" is the finest and most complete pictorial indictment of war which has appeared. It must quite frankly be considered "propaganda art." Nevertheless, Mr. and Mrs. Smith applaud...
...newspaper column is necessarily restricted to more or less isolated incidents-a magazine article gives fuller scope for a well-rounded discussion of a subject. Such an article Mr. Kent contributed, in August, 1924, to the American Mercury, nor is there any evidence that his point of view has shifted since that date. Entitled "Mr. Coolidge," the article began by maintaining that Washington correspondents, awed by the presidential office, eager for presidential esteem, always paint a President "a little prettier than...
...brought further progress in the transition of the author's creative tendencies. It turned his mind to history and the affairs of state. "Frederic and the Great Coalition" is more than a fascinating historical sketch, is a psychological treatise of a historical subject, only too rare in biographical writing. The bulky volume. "The Reflections of an Unpolitical Mind" was the first attempt in Germany to wield into a unit the political ideas and aspirations of Prussia and the philosophical and artistic "Weltanschauung" of the country of "poets and dreamers...