Word: published
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Franklin Delano Roosevelt had known just what he wanted to do after he left the White House, his longtime Press Secretary Steve Early told reporters last week. The President, who was perhaps the subject of more newspaper editorials than any other man in history, wanted to publish a tabloid sized newspaper without any editorial page. "He believed that if the people were given the facts," said Early, "they could draw their own conclusions...
...young editor-publishers had borrowed $4,500 on a G.I. loan, and scraped up another $6,500 from relatives and girl friends. Then they set out to publish a weekly called the Moderator, combining the varied virtues of Harper's, The New Yorker and TIME, with an overall New England accent. The adventures of the two publishers, 25-year-old John Donahue (late of the Coast Guard and the Burlington, Vt. News) and 26-year-old Raymond Bearse (late of the Navy and the Brookline, Mass. Citizen), made better reading than their dream magazine...
Kenneth Olson, dean of Northwestern University's school of journalism, planned to set up a model city room and have his students publish a daily Shrivenham Post on local newspaper presses. Dr. Douglas Whitaker, Stanford zoologist, created a minor Army supply problem by ordering 1,000 frogs. Among others...
...copy edition of a new four-page tabloid, the Paris Post. Directing the operations were: 1) Editor Paul Scott Mowrer, dean of the writing Mowrers (others: brother Edgar Ansel and son Richard); 2) Homburg-hatted General Manager Robert Pell, late of the State Department. Their assignment: to publish a newspaper wholly independent of the New York Post but voicing the same New Dealish views...
Last week Printer-Editor Hollands became the first German permitted to publish in the British and American occupation zones. No U.S. censor will see the Narhrichten (circ. 50,000) before it goes to press...