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World Chancelleries

World Chancelleries
Author: Edward Price Bell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1926
Genre: Peace
ISBN:

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World Chancelleries. Sentiments, ideas, and arguments expressed by famous Occidental and Oriental statesmen looking to the consolidation of the psychological bases of international peace, etc. [With facsimiles and portraits.].

World Chancelleries. Sentiments, ideas, and arguments expressed by famous Occidental and Oriental statesmen looking to the consolidation of the psychological bases of international peace, etc. [With facsimiles and portraits.].
Author: Edward Price BELL
Publisher:
Total Pages: 191
Release: 1926
Genre:
ISBN:

Download World Chancelleries. Sentiments, ideas, and arguments expressed by famous Occidental and Oriental statesmen looking to the consolidation of the psychological bases of international peace, etc. [With facsimiles and portraits.]. Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle


World Chancelleries

World Chancelleries
Author: Edward Price Bell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 300
Release: 1926
Genre: Peace
ISBN:

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World Friendship

World Friendship
Author: Evaline Dowling
Publisher:
Total Pages: 280
Release: 1928
Genre: International education
ISBN:

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Journalism of the Highest Realm

Journalism of the Highest Realm
Author: Edward Price Bell
Publisher: LSU Press
Total Pages: 408
Release: 2007-11-01
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780807132852

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Once considered the "best American newspaperman London has ever had," Edward Price Bell (1869--1943) helped invent the ideal of a professional foreign news service at the late and great Chicago Daily News, which in its heyday had the second-largest daily newspaper circulation in the United States. At the turn of the twentieth century, professional overseas reporting was still an experiment. The Chicago Daily News's visionary owner and publisher Victor Lawson was not certain how to organize the service or even what kind of news it should cover. Bell, who had distinguished himself as a young reporter in Chicago, became the anchor for the service when Lawson sent him to London in 1900. The course he set established the standard for the New York Times and other prestigious American newspapers. Unfortunately, few journalists or scholars are familiar with Bell's contributions, in part because his autobiography remained archived at the Newberry Library in Chicago. In Journalism of the Highest Realm, Jaci Cole and John Maxwell Hamilton have edited and annotated Bell's story, focusing on his lively account of the early days of the Chicago Daily News's foreign service as well as the dramatic stories his correspondents covered. James F. Hoge, Jr., the last editor-in-chief of the Chicago Daily News and present editor of Foreign Affairs, sets the stage for Bell's memoir with an informative foreword on the evolution of foreign news gathering over the last century. A bright-eyed midwestern teenager who learned journalism on the job at a small newspaper in Terre Haute, Indiana, Bell quickly established himself as an enterprising reporter. Moving on to Chicago, he became the Daily News's go-to man. He was assigned big stories and landed interviews with leading politicians, a knack that became a trademark of his overseas reporting. Over more than two decades in London, Bell entrenched himself in politics and culture, sending back thoughtful background and analysis of current events. In his memoir, Bell recounts his exclusive wartime interviews with Sir Edward Grey, the British foreign secretary, and Lord Richard Haldane, the minister of war; a later sit-down with the charismatic Il Duce, Benito Mussolini; and his rather tense exchanges with former vice president Charles Dawes, American ambassador to Britain. The respect Bell commanded among British elites and his years of experience as a London insider thrust him into a diplomatic role. Bell became an unofficial envoy to the British government and also a conduit for British views to the United States and its leaders. After Bell returned to Chicago in the early 1920s, the Daily News dispatched him on special missions to Europe and Asia to interview leaders about world peace. His accounts were published in two books and earned him a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize in the 1930s. Despite this acclaim -- indeed, to some extent because of it -- Bell fell out of favor when new owners acquired the newspaper in 1931, and he retired to the Mississippi Gulf Coast.With Journalism of the Highest Realm Cole and Hamilton put this great newspaperman into a broader context. As they show in their thoughtful introduction, Bell and the Daily News continually grappled with problems that still bedevil overseas correspondence. Foreign news, they show, has always been an enterprise that is at once valuable and vulnerable.


Among Our Books

Among Our Books
Author: Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 882
Release: 1927
Genre: Classified catalogs (Dewey decimal)
ISBN:

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School Publication

School Publication
Author: Los Angeles City School District
Publisher:
Total Pages: 410
Release: 1927
Genre:
ISBN:

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