Word: printings
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...troops. Yet there apparently was a tacit understanding that some would go, although it would not be detailed in writing. This would preserve the Hanoi fiction that there are no North Vietnamese troops there. Thieu insists that all such troops must be removed and that this be guaranteed in print. Kissinger in Paris this week undoubtedly will be pressing for some compromise formula, presumably one that would make the unwritten understanding more explicit. A knotty related problem is whether Thieu will be required to release all political prisoners now held in South Viet Nam. It was revealed that another...
...that he had conclusive proof of Bormann's whereabouts and could have had more if the Express had not "blown the whole damn thing." Farago complained that the Express, afraid it was about to be scooped by a Bormann story in the London Daily Mail, had rushed into print before he was ready. (Express Editor Ian McColl replied that he had not heard of any other Bormann story, and that Farago had never protested that he was not ready...
Although it has no legal or coercive powers, the council exercises considerable influence over Fleet Street. When it raps a paper, that publication-and all others-generally print the decision. One of the council's most publicized condemnations led the News of the World to tone down a series of after-the-fact confessions by Christine Keeler, the feminine lead in the 1963 Profumo scandal. Last September the council chided London's Daily Mirror for being "too definitive" in blaming a crew member for a plane crash while an investigation was just beginning. The Mirror apologized in print...
ARCHITECTURE OF THE RENAISSANCE by Peter Murray. 401 pages. Abrams. $35. This may well be the best general introduction to Renaissance building now in print. Peter Murray, a distinguished art historian at the University of London, has written an urbane, balanced and minutely informative text that gives a consistent level of insight into a very complex though much discussed subject. Particularly rewarding is his treatment of 15th century Italian architecture in terms not simply of aesthetics and detail but of function...
...election and its after-mathematics prove anything, it is that the majority of the U.S. does not accept a negative print of America. Manifestly the ancient immigrant dream maintains its obstinate hold on the national imagination. Nor does it appear only on election days. It can be observed any time, disguised but perceptible, at gatherings where social progress is hooted down by bootstrap sociologists-"We pulled ourselves up, why can't they...