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Word: editor (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Hurling sensational charges last night, Merwin K. Hart, Jr. '40, and Sidney Q. Curtiss '40, in a letter to the editor of the CRIMSON, published on today's editorial page, claimed that the money contributed by Harvard students and faculty last year for an ambulance to be sent to the Loyalists in Spain, was never used for that purpose, but "was collected under false pretenses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Two Charge Spanish Ambulance Money Was Collected "Under False Pretenses" | 9/30/1937 | See Source »

Paul graduated magna cum laude in History and is now doing graduate work in this subject. Last year he was chairman of the Graduate Schools Committee of Phillips Brooks House. In College he was an editor of the CRIMSON, vice-president of Phillips Brooks House, chairman of the Foreign Student Committee, and a member of the Political Union...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PHELPS AND PAUL NAMED ASSISTANT DEANS OF COLLEGE | 9/28/1937 | See Source »

...musical education of the Johnson children but now includes more grown-ups-Mrs. Johnson, a physician, a dentist, a kindergarten teacher, a psychoanalyst, three little girls and a female violinist (Charity) who conducts. Comparatively rich in amateur groups, Baltimore also has a "Sunday Night Group" organized by Editor Hamilton Owens of the Sun, an oboeist, which includes his wife (violin), Biologist Dr. Raymond Pearl of Johns Hopkins, his daughter, Mrs, Gardner Jencks, her husband and, as conductor, Bart Wirtz, head of Peabody Institute of Music's cello department...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Night Music | 9/27/1937 | See Source »

...commissioners) left him with the feeling that the New Republic was a shade too theoretical. When he returned to the U. S. he soon left the New Republic for the late great New York World, as assistant and heir to the late and even greater Editor Frank I. Cobb. whose editorials provided for years the most trenchant criticism of what would now be called Old Deal Republicanism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Elucidator | 9/27/1937 | See Source »

Lippmann's two years with able Editor Cobb taught him much, left him well fitted to take over the editorial page of the World when Cobb died at 54. For the next seven years Lippmann's editorship made and kept the World?, editorial page the brightest liberal lighthouse in U. S. journalism. With the death of the World in 1931 Lippmann seemed checked in midcareer. When he was offered and accepted a place in the columns of the arch-Republican Herald Tribune, which hired him not as an editor but as an independent columnist whose opinions the publisher...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Elucidator | 9/27/1937 | See Source »

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