The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 139Atlantic Monthly Company, 1927 - American essays |
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Page 7
... carried . columns of this stuff . Its value lay in " the supposition that it was published spontaneously by the newspaper , but even in those days few people were so credulous as not to recognize these paragraphs for what they were ...
... carried . columns of this stuff . Its value lay in " the supposition that it was published spontaneously by the newspaper , but even in those days few people were so credulous as not to recognize these paragraphs for what they were ...
Page 10
... carried to its logical conclusion produces the tabloid . This peculiar apotheosis of the worst in modern journalism not only plays up the sensational news to the last shriek of 70 - point Gothic headlines , but omits other kinds of news ...
... carried to its logical conclusion produces the tabloid . This peculiar apotheosis of the worst in modern journalism not only plays up the sensational news to the last shriek of 70 - point Gothic headlines , but omits other kinds of news ...
Page 18
... carried on among civilized nations , were to watch a battalion of soldiers practising the bayonet exercises or popping at each other with blank cartridges in a sham battle , he might be excused for sup- posing that some elaborate kind ...
... carried on among civilized nations , were to watch a battalion of soldiers practising the bayonet exercises or popping at each other with blank cartridges in a sham battle , he might be excused for sup- posing that some elaborate kind ...
Page 21
... carried out to the ultimate trial which war can exact . This trial is the hand - to - hand combat . We have seen the dangers to which cities and industrial centres will be exposed through bombing and through the landing of troops in ...
... carried out to the ultimate trial which war can exact . This trial is the hand - to - hand combat . We have seen the dangers to which cities and industrial centres will be exposed through bombing and through the landing of troops in ...
Page 22
... carried out according to a sportsmanlike etiquette . But why should reticence be required of a writer on this valuable subject which touches the public interest so nearly ? The words of Colonel Moss and Major Lang merely express without ...
... carried out according to a sportsmanlike etiquette . But why should reticence be required of a writer on this valuable subject which touches the public interest so nearly ? The words of Colonel Moss and Major Lang merely express without ...
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