Word: printings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...stories of that battle-scarred generation, none equalled for horror or hysteria the shooting in Ford's New Theatre in Washington on the evening of April 14, 1865. So confused were early reports that the Tribune, like many another paper, could think of nothing better to do than print the flashes as they came off the wire...
Sons have frequently written books about their fathers, but fathers rarely write books about their sons. A glaring modern exception was Author A. S. M. Hutchinson, who five years ago let himself go all swimmy in print over the nursery innocence of his infant boy (The Book of Simon, TIME, Dec. 8, 1930). Last week Antony gave readers a better example of paternal pride. But Antony Knebworth will never reproach his noble author for saying fatherly things about him, because Antony is a posthumous biography. Antony was killed in an airplane crash in 1933, when...
...edify . . . and their constant fear that they are being corrupted, are a noble, rather than a comfortable, element in the social life of the University." Rhodes Scholar Abimelech V. Oover has many points of difference with Rhodes Scholar Paul Engle, but readers who have met them both in print will see Max Beerbohm's point...
...advantage of the fact that when the human eye moves it generates a slight electric current, invented a metre which bridges the face from temple to temple, makes a record of eye movements. They found that a subject moves his eyes about five times while reading a line of print, keeps his gaze fixed when shaking his head, moves his eyes before he moves his head when looking to the side...
...without threats of thunderbolts, Satan finally persuaded us to print his contributions. His column, entitled "Horns and Claws," begins tomorrow on the editorial page...