Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...addressed to anyone, A Report covers twelve typewritten pages with a historical summary in which Japan and China are pictured as entangled in difficulties such that "solution can be achieved only by the co-operation of all countries interested in the Far East...
...Report the Scandinavian delegates prepared to add a printed transcript of all speeches, notes and replies at the Brussels Conference. The Great Powers were reluctant to go to this expense, but the conference adjournment was postponed to permit a wrangle over the Scandinavians' point in Brussels this week...
...decades U. S. school superintendents turned out overstuffed annual reports. Their tons of fat brown volumes, unread even by the teachers, gathered dust in official archives. Two years ago superintendents made two discoveries: 1) a report that the taxpayers liked would serve political uses, 2) everybody likes the picture of a child more than a statistical table. Result was an epidemic of school picture books that by last week had assumed the proportions of a national movement. Latest of these products to roll from the presses was Your Children and Their Schools, "an informal report to the patrons...
...picturizing its report, Los Angeles followed the example of Detroit, Chicago, New Orleans, New York City. Originators of this trend were New York's Superintendent Harold George Campbell and his secretary, Howard A. Shiebler, 36, part of whose own education was acquired as a newspaper correspondent and co-author of one of George White's Scandals. Secretary Shiebler decided two years ago that "the law requires the superintendent to make an annual report but does not require that it be dull." With the Board of Education photographer. Ambrose J. Hickey, he spent six months touring New York City...
...result, an illustrated book with the general format of FORTUNE, was a great success. Its first printing of 3,000 copies was quickly exhausted, likewise a second printing of 1,000 copies. Today, as Secretary Shiebler is getting his third illustrated report ready for press, his files are laden with 10,000 letters from parents and top-rank educators who admired his first two efforts, and publishers have made offers to print it commercially...