Word: published
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...hidden behind a rolltop desk, bobbing up into view every time the door opened, sinking down again to lose herself in the pile of manuscripts. By 1936, when she died at 75, Miss Monroe had racked up an astonishing record of Poetry firsts: she was the first to publish T. S. Eliot's Prufrock, a satire on the effete culture of Boston ("In the room the women come and go, Talking of Michelangelo"-); Rupert Brooke's War Sonnets; Joyce Kilmer's Trees; Vachel Lindsay's General William Booth Enters Into Heaven, She gave the first critical...
...report was kept locked up while State Department officials brooded over it. Last week, Under Secretary of State Robert Lovett said that the report would not be made public. He gave no reason, but Washington newsmen learned that the decision not to publish the report had been made by Secretary of State George Marshall. Marshall, it was said, had not yet fully subscribed to the report's conclusions and recommendations. He believed that publication at this time would only fan the fires of U.S.-Soviet conflict. And he was afraid that publication would jeopardize congressional approval of European...
...Miszlakowice. Western observers in Berlin, however, believe that Germany is the real key to Moscow's European policy and that the Cominform declaration was timed to prepare the way for a major Communist drive in Western Germany in a few weeks. Britain and the U.S. are about to publish a list of more than 800 factories to be dismantled for reparations. In their zone the Russians dismantled two years ago, before the Germans had a chance to pick themselves up and dust themselves off. Today there are German political parties, unions and newspapers which can express the almost unanimous...
...Proper Bostonians, young (30) Cleveland Amory, a Social Registerite himself, has set out to examine his peers. The book is the first of a series which Button will publish about U.S. society (others to come: New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Santa Fe). Culled largely from First Family writings and conversations with Beacon Hill contemporaries, Amory's smoothly phrased findings are not likely to ruffle the poise of the Cabots and the Lowells. Still, many a less proper Bostonian will find much here to delight him. Says Amory: "Besides not being Mayflower-descended, Boston's First Families of today...
Preparing to publish her fourth issue since revival last spring, Mother Advocate last night sent out a call for more material through her summer executive, Lloyd S. Gilmour, Jr. '49, from her newly-painted abode at 40 Row Street. The deadline is September...