Word: printed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Durie Malcolm, now Mrs. Thomas H. Shevlin, either scoffed at the whole thing as too "ridiculous" to discuss or dismissed queries with the comment: "I'm bored with this." The White House reasoning, no doubt, was that a categorical denial would acknowledge the story and get it into print, whereas off-the-record "no comments" would leave it in a vague limbo where it might eventually...
...were the official voice of the U.S. Department of State. It is not. But in 40 years, an anniversary reached this week, Foreign Affairs quarterly has grown to be an accurate and authoritative observer of world events and, in its quiet way, one of the most influential periodicals in print...
...Twain's surviving daughter, Clara Samossoud, refused to let it be published. In this, she followed the half-jesting advice of Twain himself. "Tomorrow," he wrote William Dean Howells, "I mean to dictate a chapter which will get my heirs and assigns burned alive if they venture to print it this side of A.D. 2006-which I judge they won't." Considerably ahead of the year 2006, much of the banned material has now been published in Letters from the Earth-only incidentally in the face of Russian taunts that the U.S. had suppressed Twain's antireligious...
Anti-Semitism's Pulse. From the American Jewish Committee came perhaps the strongest reply, which America agreed to print in this week's issue. In it, the A.J.C. particularly attacks America's suggestion of the "bargain" that Jews should strike, arguing that pluralism gives every minority the right to work for any political end it sincerely wants. "Have Catholics been deterred from pressing their views in the legislatures and courts by the worry that victory might produce 'a harvest of fear and distrust'? Your editorial suggests that all necessary steps be taken to prevent increased...
None of Pegler's legion of enemies turned out to be thornier than Correspondent Quentin Reynolds. After Pegler attacked Reynolds in print for "nuding along [with] a wench" and cowardice. Reynolds sued. In court in 1954, Reynolds' attorney, Louis Nizer, forced Pegler to admit that 130 statements he had made about Reynolds were untrue, and Reynolds was awarded $175,001. After that, the list of newspapers that carried Pegler gradually dropped from more than 200 to 140, and the columnist was tamed by heavy editing from Hearst...