Word: print
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...When, in print and on the radio, the issues between General Motors, U.S. Steel and other corporations v. labor are reported, the impression is given that the large companies are fat, avaricious and Fascist. Labor delights in fostering that impression...
Last week, after looking into the gaunt and dull-eyed face of liberated Europe for six months, the "nationalities editor" of the Cleveland Press came home. As gently as he could, in lectures and in print, Theodore Andrica would describe that haunting face to the "foreign" two-thirds of Cleveland's population, gathered in mass meetings, schools, churches, parlors. The Czechs, Serbs, and Slovenes would be grateful for news, however tragic, from the homeland. But sometimes it would be hard to look them...
...wish to inform you that I have never uttered either the words or the substance of this alleged quotation. I should be glad if, with your usual courtesy, you will print this denial in your next issue...
...clue necessary is shown in the group, and the problem of the student is to decide whether it was murder, suicide, or accidental death. Furthermore, everything is real, though scaled down to one inch per foot. Doors, windows, and bureau drawers open, clothing (including underwear) is complete, books have print...
Newspapers then were few and bad; the public paid up to a shilling a print for what were, in effect, editorial cartoons. George III complained that he "could not understand" Caricaturist James Gillray's pictorial attacks on him. The King would have had to be stupider than history has made him to miss the venom of Gillray's cartoon showing "Farmer George" sleepily sloffing up a soft-boiled...