Word: print
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Thirty-seven ex-New Dealers, denouncing Wallace's Progressive Party as "a corruption of American liberalism," announced their support of Truman. In print, their names had an odd, ghostly air, as if they were historical characters stepping out of a book of Roosevelt memoirs. Among them: Francis Biddle, Frank C. Walker, Dean Acheson, Thurman Arnold, Adolf Berle, Tommy ("the Cork") Corcoran, Wayne Coy, Elmer Davis, Leon Henderson, Archibald MacLeish, Paul A. Porter, Judge Samuel I. Rosenman, Robert E. Sherwood, Aubrey Williams. A fortnight ago in Paris, U.N. Delegate Eleanor Roosevelt, who had been noticeably silent on presidential politics, took...
...proudly donned his postmasters' convention badge, dutifully attended the sessions, listened gravely as Postmaster General Jesse M. Donaldson declared that the post office faced a record $550 million deficit, that Congress should overhaul its "horse & buggy rates." Penny postcards, Donaldson pointed out, cost the department 2.6? to print, sell, and handle, and 95% of them are sold to advertisers who flood the mails with them "by the billions." Gus nodded soberly...
Burly Ben Reese, managing editor of the Post-Dispatch, promptly roared that the paper would put up Link's $11,000 bond "and will defend him to the last ditch." The Post-Dispatch rushed into print with a Sunday editorial (titled "The Green Machine Fights Back") that snarled: "Cowardly men in Illinois are watching the clock as the hour hand moves toward Election Day . . . They think they can muzzle the Post-Dispatch. They are wrong. The Post-Dispatch will not be intimidated. It will not be gagged." Staffers figured that the charge against Link would be quietly dropped after...
...first commercial Xerographic machine, which is expected to retail "for a very few hundred dollars," will be for the quick, economical reproduction of letters, documents, blueprints, maps, etc., in offices. Many bugs have to be worked out before Xerography can do more. Eventually, Haloid hopes to produce cameras which print their photographs almost instantaneously, and light, cheap presses which will slash capital investments and operating costs in the newspaper and magazine publishing industry...
...does that mean merely the Editor, Editorial Board, or the entire staff? Is it the unanimous opinion of the staff, or the opinion of a select group of editors and policy-makers? And, incidently, under what authority does "The Official University Daily" which portrays student news, activities, and events print "the CRIMSON supports the candidacy of President Truman" when you supposedly represent a cross-section of the student body? Or do you merely represent a cross-section of the CRIMSON staff? ... Mark Gibson...