Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...report issued last month Dean Young B. Smith of the Columbia School of Law said: "Practically every one at some time needs a doctor, but the proportion of the population who require legal services is necessarily limited." Says Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the A. M. A.'s Journal, about overcrowding in the medical profession: "The A. M. A.'s Commission on Medical Education found there are 25% too many doctors. However, everybody realizes the distribution of doctors is not what it should...
...Franklin Roosevelt graciously greeted a gathering of writers, critics and reporters last week at the Manhattan "editorial workshop'' of Philadelphia's Ladies' Home Journal. Momentarily lost in the bulky herd of Rockefeller Center office buildings, Mrs. Roosevelt had arrived a little late and out of breath at her own party. Its purpose was to inform the world that Ladies' Home Journal will appear next week with the first installment of "This Is My Story," Anna Eleanor Roosevelt Roosevelt's autobiography. These memoirs were billed as the first ever -written by a First Lady while...
...Democratic National Convention of 1924, showed the manuscript to Franklin Roosevelt when it was done. The President suggested no changes, and Mrs. Roosevelt's dapper literary agent, George T. Bye, made the sale not to Crowell's Companion but to Curtis Publishing Co.'s Home Journal. Proceeds of Mrs. Roosevelt's writing and broadcasting have hitherto been donated to various charities. What charity would receive the Journal's undoubtedly large check (probably upwards of $50,000), Mrs. Roosevelt last week...
Whoever benefits from Eleanor Roosevelt's remuneration, publication of her recollections was a bright feather in the Journal'?, editorial and promotional cap. Since July 1935 the Journal'?, editors have been a man & wife, Bruce and Beatrice Blackmar Gould, only such team at the head of a major U. S. magazine. Circulation success has attended the efforts of the Goulds and of Promotion Manager Richard Ziesing Jr. to keep the Journal up where it was in its great days under the late Edward Bok. Last week in the trade press, the Journal was announcing that its January circulation...
...Symphony again. While Packer Swift watched anxiously from his box, Dux undertook the Strauss and Mozart she has loved since youth. Though her voice has lost freshness and size, she treated every phase with marvelous control. When, later in the week, Dux repeated her concert, she caused the Journal of Commerce's Claudia Cassidy to exclaim of Strauss's Morgen: "So it happened again, the recurrent miracle of sublimated song that is Strauss at his highest inspiration-the song so few singers dare to tackle because it is all spirit. To hear it twice within three days...