Word: published
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Shock-haired, 45-year-old Sam Allison, director of the new Institute of Nuclear Studies, said that the Manhattan Project had ruined him by turning him from a good research worker into a bureaucrat. Said he: "Scientists want to publish their work so that it will do the most good for mankind. The Army wants to pay us to produce things, and keep quiet...
...needs of students in uniform and a scattering of civilian undergraduates, prepetuated itself as the un-opinionated Service News. This wartime adaptation will have served for three years and six weeks as the news organ of Harvard when it reverts to the pre-war CRIMSON. The CRIMSON will publish three times per week at first and return to a full daily schedule by the fall term...
...sorrow over this error. . . . We request you, if it's possible to publish something of how the facts were in actuality (stuff to this you have in this letter, and in your correspondents Charlton Whitehead's report, too). We do this, informed over this that TIME is world's greatest magazine and that every word published in it has weight and power. We would be very happy we could read Truth over us in such magazine as TIME...
...name: Harry Gumm), 73, dear old daddy of Tin Pan Alley (which he named), writer of such dear old songs as I Want a Girl Just Like the Girl, A Bird in a Gilded Cage, In the Evening by the Moonlight, Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie, first to publish Irving Berlin and George Gershwin; of a heart attack; in Manhattan...
...released from service, the C.O.s plan to expand their wartime program into a permanent organization. The Attendant is being replaced this month with a bigger publication, the Psychiatric Aid. With funds supplied largely by Friends, Mennonites, and Brethren, a full-time staff of eleven C.O.s will also publish handbooks for attendants and campaign for training courses in all mental hospitals...