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Word: witlessly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...morning's Press is reprinted as a reprimand to those adolescents who are prone to regard Boston journals as witless panders to the rabble. In its blissful if irritating myopia, youth can scarcely appreciate the ripe sagacity which directs the composition of news and editorials in the great world. But here the adolescent is appealed to in familiar terms. Only the purposeful blind can fail to detect in this piece that genteel sense of humor, that same mellow perspective which graced the manipulation of Captain Armstrong's publicity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARK! THE HERALD'S ANGEL | 10/14/1933 | See Source »

...inexcusable. The temper of a nation which demands from its newspapers photographs of women in the electric chair presents a curious problem in psychology. Until it is solved, Harvard must assure those who enter its jurisdiction that they shall be not more than normally exposed to this smug and witless barbarism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GENTLEMEN OF THE PRESS | 9/30/1933 | See Source »

...case of Progressivism, he found later employment. At least two worthy crusades were so distorted by his leadership as to be useless for long to come. Trust busting he converted into a mammoth and gaudy college yell, and then left it, imprisoned in the toils of a witless and unenforceable law, to the kind of animate death in which it survives. The third party became in his hands a symbol of perfidy to the politicians, and a testimony to the populace that only by the two party system could the gods be appeased, and water and honey made to flow...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yesterday | 9/30/1933 | See Source »

...KAWAKAMI is the Washington correspondent of Tokyo's great "Hochi Shimbun." The West knows him as Japan's solitary boast in the art of effective propaganda, the only member of her voluble corps of sooth-sayers clever enough to admit that the Shanghai intervention was a grave and witless blunder which could not intelligently be defended. Further, he tells why the Japanese have made themselves unpopular in Manchoukuo, and spoofs loudly at the idea that the new state was founded on the happy will of thirty million Manchurians. All this is too naive for Mr. Kawakami, who builds...

Author: By R. G. O., | Title: THE CRIMSON BOOKSHELF | 6/14/1933 | See Source »

...Evidently the same gradus honorum will be observed in world flights. But there is an important difference. Mr. Brody relinquished the front pages on his third attempt, and even the barrelleers were only good for five. When naivete has followed in the exodus of the earlier colonial virtues, possibly witless aeroplane maneouvers will join their predecessors in silence, and the native yen for high romance will undergo an advertising catharsis into more lively and less hazardous channels...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MIND OVER MATTERN | 6/7/1933 | See Source »

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