Word: print
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...trust you will print this letter or in some other way correct your original but erroneous statement, thus placing the credit where...
...editors; instead they were flapped onto front pages, otherwise almost bare of news, as is customary on metropolitan Monday mornings. The New York World had a picture spread. The Times had a front page and breakover. The American made it the day's feature. The tabloids, preparing to print pictures of a meal sack labeled "This is what the corpse of Mlle. Roseray looked like when it was dredged out of the puddle"; were able instead to slap somewhat naked pictures of her prominently on their covers...
Conde Nast (Vanity Fair, Vogue. Last week, as he sailed on the S. S. Munargo for Havana, he said that from April on he would edit and print an edition of Vogue in Germany. French and British editions already exist...
Died. Richard Charles Flannigan, 70, Judge of the 25th Judicial Circuit; of pleurisy; in Chicago. It was he who presided over the famed Theodore Roosevelt libel case in 1913. George A. Newett, an editor of Ishpeming, Mich., had described Roosevelt in print as a "hard drinker." Damages awarded to the late President by Judge Flannigan...
Today for the first time in its history the CRIMSON is giving one of its candidates a chance to express in print his frank opinion of a CRIMSON competition. Although the candidate in question is in the last stages of his competition and has consequently passed through the depression and discouragement of the first few weeks, his view of CRIMSON work is not blurred by the softening mist which separates the usual graduate editor from the scene of his undergraduate labors...