Word: print
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Giangreco said yesterday that he started the company with a group of friends last December to publish a few copies of The Fake Paper as "a little joke on The Real Paper." The first parody was "so obscenely successful" that the company had to print an extra 6000 copies to meet the popular demand. The group has published 55,000 copies of The Tucson...
...went to Washington and met UMWA officials and people in the Bureau of Mines. I crawled through the bowels of every television station in the coalfields looking for footage I could relate." The movie was screened in Harlan soon after it was made, and Kopple gave the people a print they could run whenever they wanted. "The place was packed," she said. "There three showings, and they wheeled people in on big silver hospital beds. It was like reliving the strike to them...
...fill out barrels of reports, many of them overlapping and unnecessary. In all, 44 agencies conduct 261 energy data-gathering programs that will cost $100 million this year. The reporting guidelines are often as clear as crude oil. Typically, one big oil company last year submitted 375,000 computer print-outs and 577 miles of computer tapes to the Federal Energy Administration alone...
...perhaps products of human expression. On the evidence of Talking to Myself, Terkel has rarely sought out people who actually run things. An indefatigable romantic, he prefers the "mute, inglorious Miltons" among the underdogs: the Welsh miner with a taste for the impressionists, the Cockney waitress with a Bruegel print on her wall, the Swedish miner who quotes Gibbon. Terkel is moved by what he takes to be the oppression of such people. As he presents them, though, they seem to be doing very nicely indeed...
...with love. Amalia (Madeline Kahn) and Georg (Barry Bostwick) are secretly lonely-heart pen pals who have corresponded ardently for a year. Neither happens to have given the other a clue to the fact that they are fellow clerks in the same Budapest parfumerie. Ecstatic about each other in print, they are rather allergic to each other in person. When will the epistolary lovers discover the secret behind their secret? With all the fine talents caroling and cavorting onstage, it is not a pressing question...