Word: viewing
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Professor Halford L. Haskins, Dean of the Fletcher School of Diplomacy and International Relations, and Dr. Philip W. Ireland, Instructor in Government, will speak on "How I view the News" over station WORI, this afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, under the sponsorship of the League of Nations Association...
...most efficient system, coordination of effort between the Dean's Office, P.B.H., Hygiene Building, and advisers is essential. In formation about students should be pooled, and the confusion engendered by so many agencies eliminated by full cooperation and understanding. In view of the burden which Dean Leighton carries, the wisdom of appointing an assistant to handle only advisory matters is worth considering. Such a man, who must have plenty of time and interest, would perform general secretarial duties, such as correlating and distributing the data prepared by the various college agencies...
...more bye-elections are due soon, and last week the Prime Minister and new Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax swung into a series of local addresses by which they hope to educate British public opinion in their real points of view. Of Anthony Eden, Lord Halifax said: "I look forward to the time when the country will again enjoy the benefit of his service and guidance in its administration! . . . It is no fault of the League of Nations and still less of His Majesty's Government, but . . . if we were to act as some suggest and try to organize...
...Ambassador Kennedy. "The number of American ladies presented, however, has on the average been twice as great as the number of ladies presented by all other diplomatic missions put together. . . . I cannot see that it serves any useful purpose for either one of the two countries and, in my view, the practice should cease." Therefore the Embassy will present from now on only "the families of American officials in this country" and "members of the immediate families of those Americans who are not merely visiting England but are domiciled here...
...most of whom gave it less than complete approval. As his own comment, the President took occasion to call certain functions of the Interstate Commerce Commission "in all probability unconstitutional," to repeat his opposition to Government ownership of the roads, to agree that from a long-range point of view consolidation of all U. S. transport under one body would be advisable. But on the immediate question of how the hard-pressed roads are to keep on meeting pay rolls and fixed indebtedness, Mr. Roosevelt passed the buck completely to Congress...