Word: printed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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When TIME was launched 43 years ago this month, the "library" the editors took with them to the print shop the first night that they went to press consisted of half a dozen reference works and, appropriately enough, a copy of Homer's Iliad. Today's library, which occupies half of the 26th floor of the TIME & LIFE Building, houses some 83,000 books, half a million biographic and other file folders, and is staffed by 117 men and women, 22 of whom hold degrees in library science. The bureau also maintains a microfilm section...
...benefit," she explained. "Not in my shoes!" he bellowed. With a sneer, she took them off and started out in her stocking feet. Then, with a smirk, he picked her up and carried her to a taxi. ("Not a word of truth in that story," says Merrick, "but print it anyway. I want people to think I'm strong enough to carry a woman twice my size...
...cost a record $26,552 per sq. in. At the new record's rate, a canvas a yard square would cost $34,411,000, more than 15 times the highest price ever recorded for a painting. A Rembrandt etching, called the "Hundred Guilder" print for the healthy sum it brought in the 1640s, brought an even rosier price of $72,800. But the record price for a print was set when a late 15th century engraving by a German master known only as P.M. sold...
...MPHA campaign intends to print a petition supporting the bill in as many college and university newspapers in the state as will sell space to the organization. The petition contains testimonies from both medical and religious authorities--including Pichard Cardinal Cushing--which favor the revision of the old birth control laws. It urges all professors to send signed cards, indicating their support of revision to MPHA...
Slightly Roundheeled. The Double Image is Author Maclnnes' 13th book, and as usual it is riding high on most bestseller lists, with 70,000 copies in print. Also as usual, the hero is firm-chinned, clean-limbed-this time a young American economist named John Craig who, armed only with good manners and innocence, is recruited to help thwart an ingenious Communist scheme to penetrate U.S. security. The plot involves a trip to the Greek island of Mykonos, and MacInnes evokes a picture of its windswept charm, just as in previous books she evoked the charm of Brittany, Venice...