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Word: print (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Maybe you'll remember that we started to print TIME in Manila almost the same day General MacArthur marched in (a Jap sniper was still banging away only fifty yards from the bindery). And soon now we will be turning out twenty times as many copies as we could print that first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Oct. 22, 1945 | 10/22/1945 | See Source »

...Japanese people had already begun to toy with freedom. Newspapers flexed their muscles and criticized the old regime. Hundreds of letters, denouncing and demanding, broke into astonishing print. Politicians and intellectuals, eager to please the Americans, were busy forming new political parties. Long-repressed concepts came up in their talk: universal suffrage, proportional representation, free economy, free trade. Old Ichiro Hatoyama, leader of the rising Liberal Party, talked soberly of strengthening the Diet and weakening the Army and Navy. The forms and manners of party rule were not new to the Japs, whose Diet (Parliament) is 55 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: Revolution by Decree | 10/15/1945 | See Source »

TIME itself, early in the '403, printed a penetrating and erudite review of Freud's last book (or an edition of his combined works), and referred farsightedly to future designations of our age as the Age of Freud-the first time, so far as I know, that this prophecy has been made in print, though it has since come into common usage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Mothers Answered | 10/8/1945 | See Source »

Shirley Temple, out of school, grown up, and married at 17, was about to go into print - with an autobiography titled My Young Life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Private Lives | 10/8/1945 | See Source »

From an average 40,000 circulation in its first, precarious years (when it led the Tsar's police an underground chase), Pravda grew to 3,000,000 before World War II. Lately the print order has been around 2,000,000 (about the same as the biggest seller in the U.S., the nationalist tabloid New York Daily News), could easily rise to three times that-if Pravda could only get more paper. Price: 20 kopecks (about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Truth Is 33 Years Old | 10/8/1945 | See Source »

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