Word: editorships
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...reporter on the Harvard Crimson. Organizer and for nearly five years head of the Herald Tribune's Chicago office, he was sent abroad as London correspondent in 1941, two years later became chief of the London bureau. His able dispatches on French politics presumably earned him his editorship...
...Editor for this term. He replaces Robert S. Landau '45. C. Newton Peabody '46 of Grosse Point, Michigan and the V-12 Unit will be Managing Editor, succeeding Lawrence G. Raisz '46. Dana Fernald '46 of Larchmont, New York and the Naval R.O.T.C. moves up from the Service Schools Editorship to take the place of Arthur C. Fields '46 as Executive Editor...
...Yale professor emeritus; in New Haven. Gifted equally in research, writing and inspiration to younger historians, he succeeded Woodrow Wilson in 1925 as president of the American Historical Society (the late great Henry Adams' onetime post), retired in 1931 from his professorship, in 1933 from his 21-year editorship of Yale's Historical Publications. He won 1935's Pulitzer Prize for the first of his four crowning volumes: The Colonial Period of American History...
...perhaps the most expatriated of the young expatriates was Harold Stearns, who was known to his intimates as a "picturesque ruin." Behind Harold Stearns, in America, lay the broken promise of a brilliant career-essays in The New Republic, editorship of The Dial, prime mover of the famous iconoclastic symposium Civilization in the United States. To the ruin of his career, Expatriate Stearns seemed anxious to add the ruin of himself. The news of his death caused friends to remember the days when, as he confessed in his autobiographical The Street I Know, he made a career of drink...
Soaring Eaglet. Before Munich, comparatively few people in the U.S. had heard of Kaltenborn or knew that he had been on the air for 16 years. He got into punditry by virtue of his associate editorship on the Brooklyn Eagle, a penchant for public speaking, and a well-traveled curiosity about foreign nations...