Word: expression
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...group of TIME readers is more militantly American than our 2,100 subscribers scattered through Alaska's 586,400 square miles. They get the U.S. edition of TIME by air express, so that most of them are reading their weekly copies at the same time as U.S. readers. In this week's mail one of them wrote as follows...
...coming 5? tabloid Mirror, which claims its circulation has risen from 161,188 to 193,924 in the last six months, plumped in favor of the ordinance. But Hearst's Herald & Express (circ. 348,543), figuring that the law might cost it some 12,000 daily street sales, denounced the whole thing as just a Mirror plot...
...which the Russians (and Lie) have advocated all along. Lie added he was sure Russia wanted U.N. to work. Whether Lie intended it or not, this could be taken to mean that it would be the West's fault if U.N. did not work. This week Lie will express his views in Washington. He implied that he would propose that talks be resumed to end the cold war. According...
...Ideas must always be free, Tney must never be licensed . . " It made no difference, he added, whether licensing was by a government agency or by a self-regulating body of journalists. Said Canham: "Consider the great martyrs in the battle for freedom of the press. If their right to express their great ideas had depended on the vote of their own colleagues, many of them would have been voted out of the profession...
...York City last week, television went underground. After filming sections of the Ford Theater's production of Subway Express in the I.R.T. subway between Chambers Street and Pennsylvania Station, Producer Winston O'Keefe moved nearly 100 actors, technicians and camera crewmen up to The Bronx for a telecast from an isolated subway car in the I.R.T. Jerome Avenue yard...