Word: printings
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Ervin is unlike most of the politicians that Correspondent Neil MacNeil has covered during his 24 years in Washington. "He has never been a publicity hound," says MacNeil; "he has never run a mimeograph to shoot off a daily barrage of press releases, hoping to get his name in print. Yet as a raconteur and one of Washington's hardest workers, he has always been well known to anyone dealing regularly with the Senate." Now, as chairman of the select Senate committee investigating the Watergate affair, Ervin is becoming equally familiar to the public. For this week...
Paul Gallagher, a member of the National Caucus of Labor Committees, said The Crimson "prints such scientifically worded, political drivel, but refuses to print the political positions of radical labor organizations...
...print media grumbled about the preferential treatment accorded to the TV press, but if the newspaper reporters felt bad about losing the inside track, they were just plain sick over the amount of money being spent by the networks for a few minutes of film...
...sculpture at the time. It was his opportunity and pleasure to explore, with lens and plate, a range of relationships between the aspects of a whole visual culture that was not so accessible to earlier masters of photography like Nadar and Oscar Rejlander. In his 20s, Steichen's prints frankly imitated the "look" of paintings; a famous image of J.P. Morgan, glaring over his bottle nose out of the gloom, comes as near to Titian as photography can, and the gum-print and pigment-print portraits that Steichen made of himself and his friends, reworking the image with eraser...
That a Harvard Paper should bother to print up such a spate of letters, however, comes as a great shock...