Word: editorships
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Critic Orage, 57, was born in Yorkshire, England. Great & good friend of the late great Katherine Mansfield, he was the first to print her stories. Other contributors to the New Age: Dikran Kouyoumdjian (Michael Arlen), Jack Collings Squire, W. L. George, Llewelyn Powys. During his editorship, 54 books were dedicated to him. Orage now lives in Manhattan, lectures on the art of writing, on the psychological methods of Religionist Georges Gurdjieff (TIME, March 24). Other books by him: An Alphabet of Economics; Nietzsche in Outline and Aphorism; Friedrich Nietzsche; The Dionysian Spirit of the Age; Consciousness: Animal, Human and Superhuman...
...Roark Whitney Wickliffe Bradford, 33, descended from Massachusetts Puritans, was born in Tennessee, lives in New Orleans. During the War he was ist Lieutenant of Coast Artillery at Panama, then in France; after the War instructor in gunnery and ballistics, then newspaperman. Two months ago he resigned the Sunday editorship of the New Orleans Times-Picayune to give all his time to writing. Author Bradford's first book, Ol' Man Adam, was a success; his second, This Side of Jordan, a serious novel about Negroes, a failure...
Resigned. Robert ("Droch") Bridges, author (Overheard in Arcady, Bramble Brae), journalist; from the editorship of Scribner's, having been with the magazine 43 years, for 16 as its editor-in-chief...
Resigned. Ralph Pulitzer, 50. who last April resigned the editorship of the New York World; from the presidency of the Press Publishing Co. (New York World, New York Evening World). Reason: ill health. He is succeeded by his brother Herbert Pulitzer, 33. youngest of the three sons of the late great Publisher Joseph Pulitzer (son Joseph Pulitzer, 44, publishes the St. Louis Post-Dispatch...
This rift, symbolic of that which is discernible throughout the Protestant church, had, another direct consequence last week when Dr. Samuel G. Craig of Princeton, editor of The Presbyterian (weekly), onetime board member of Princeton Theological Seminary, was forced to resign his editorship by vote of the board of Presbyterian Publishing Co., Inc. Said he: "The occasion of this action on the part of the board was its dissatisfaction with the editorial policy I have steadfastly pursued and which I was unwilling to alter, especially with reference to Princeton and Westminster Seminaries." Steadily had Dr. Craig's editorials assailed...