Word: editor
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...always aware that he must spend no time on drivel no matter how entertainingly written. That was shrewd self-management, remarked the Presbyterians, and his formula made the rounds of the ministers. Last week it appeared again-in William H. Leach's magazine on parish administration, Church Management. Editor Leach revived it in warning ministers against the "newspaper mind [which] knows all about the day's happenings in a jumbled, chaotic sort of way" and does not think. Nor should ministers permit themselves, Editor Leach admonished, to organize their sermons, as so many do, "in about the same...
...another article Editor Leach advised ministers on what they should demand of congregations. The pastor "has the right to presuppose that his people; come to church prepared to worship...
...seeks to protect himself against libel suits by partly blotting out names which yet remain identifiable by the associates of the men traduced-that publisher is a disgrace to the profession." Since one of the Hearst documents purports that $25,000 was "ordered paid" from Mexican sources to Editor Oswald Garrison Villard of The Nation, he quietly took occasion to reproduce that document in facsimile, last week, in The Nation's cover. In an unruffled article The Nation said: "We are aware, of course, that the Senators look upon the entire series as impudent but unskilled forgeries and that...
Engaged. Miss Mariquita S. Villard, niece of Editor Oswald Garrison Villard of The Nation, to Louis Warren Hill Jr., of St. Paul, Minn., who now functions with the Great Northern Railway, built by his grandfather, the late famed James Jerome Hill, and of which his father, Louis Warren Hill, is chairman of the Board of Directors...
MORROW'S ALMANACK-edited by Burton Rascoe-William Morrow ($2). Editor Rascoe, who seems to be aware of everything in the world, has concocted an oldtime almanack distinctly in harmony with the traditional mood of the season. To his aid have rushed a host of accomplished specialists with important contributions. Marc Connelly, playwright & seer, provides the general forecast for the approaching year; Critic Nathan suggests a breath-taking change in post-Volstead nomenclature; Banker Streeter* supplies a startling opinion of what 1928 will do for Big Business; Florenz Ziegfeld dissertates on his favorite topic; poems flow from many...