Word: printings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...unspoken awareness partially ended a make-shift interview with Harland Dixon, playing in "Alice on Broadway" at the Uptown. Irrelevant recollections of G.B.S., "A.E.", and P. G. Wodehouse overtook the CRIMSON reporter, and for a number of reason she offered the purely hypocritical question as to what he might print...
...Print? Anything that won't put me in jail or cost me my job. . . Yes, I agree with what you're thinking. It makes no difference what I say. You'll write your own 'copy.' The reporter's interview of a reporter, with some conventional color...
Nine thousand tickets for today's game were locked in the H. A. A. safe overnight. These 9000 tickets cost less than $50 to print and when they slipped through the presses there was every expectation that they would bring is $36,000 to help balance the H. A. A. budget. Well, they will remain unsold, and today's 52d annual classic--I use the word advisedly--will be witnessed by less than the customary full house. It is an astonishing thing to find H-Y tickets going begging...
...beneath the level and dignity of any high-class journal or publication. Your gullibility in swallowing these accusations, hook, line and sinker, is unthinkable. I cannot understand how any self-respecting reporter, however careless or incompetent, could fail to ascertain the facts before putting such a story in print. It appears that this article must have been inspired from other sources, as it would be difficult to impute to your publication such a total absence of the elementary principles of decency and fair treatment...
...Every Italian paper was recently instructed: first, to print the name of the Premier and the King in capitals; second, to omit the names of lesser official personages whenever possible, printing only their titles. Explained Achille Starace, National Fascist secretary: "The party has been made absolutely impersonal. The hierarchy . . . is composed of faithful Blackshirts who, at the change of the guard, present arms with the sense of duty fulfilled...