Word: reviewer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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First of Harvard's new publications will make its appearance next week when "The Harvard Educational Review", published by the Graduate School of Education and edited by Howard E. Wilson, Assistant professor of Education, presents its inaugural issue...
...belief that under this new constitutional practice the President should in every fourth year, insofar as seems reasonable, review the existing state of our national affairs and outline broad future problems, leaving specific recommendations for future legislation to be made by the President about to be inaugurated." Having settled that matter of precedent, Franklin Roosevelt settled down to what appeared to be almost such a workaday enumeration of the problems confronting the Government as Calvin Coolidge used to give. Chief difference was that the Roosevelt voice cloaked them with an aura of statesmanship. He mentioned that he would ask Congress...
Taking this as its springboard, the London weekly News-Review cooked up a two-page rehearsal of Kent's conduct over recent years, served it up hot on all British newsstands for sixpence...
Allen, as having none of the importance which turned Mrs. Simpson into a Constitutional Crisis. With the Duke & Duchess on its cover, News-Review headed its story "Kent and His Companion," featuring two pictures...
Allen, who was previously the Cuban Marquise de Casa Maury and before that the London modiste's mannequin Paula Gellibrand. H. R. H. Marina, Duchess of Kent, was described by News-Review as having "drifted from the smart set and left her husband to go the smart socialite rounds for them both . . . with zest." In London the Beaverbrook Daily Ex press (circulation 2,040,000) broke the Kent & Mrs. Allen story in Britain's daily press, sharply editorialized: "One way to keep clear of such news is not to do the things that make such news...