Word: published
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Yale Daily News has made no official announcement about what changes, if any, it will make in its policy because of the war. In a telegram to the CRIMSON last night, the News said that for the present it would continue to publish six issues a week...
...started the Galahad Press in Asheville, N.C., to publish the New Liberator. The Press lasted four years, and Publisher Pelley was tried, convicted and fined in 1935 for violating North Carolina Blue Sky laws by selling stock: 1) in an insolvent company which he had represented as being in sound condition; 2) without registering as a securities dealer in North Carolina. On Pelley's promise to be good, the sentence was suspended...
...widely read pulp magazines and newspapers of our nation. This quotation happens to come from an article by Ernest O. Hauser in the January issue of LOOK magazine. Claiming that "no one in America has a keener understanding of the Japanese than Mr. Hauser," LOOK proceeds to publish an article which would be labeled "humour" if it were not printed at this particular time. "The Japanese is compelled to go through life without romance--which may be why he lacks imagination and is generally such a dull companion," writes our learned "sociologist." "I have seen little boys behave so badly...
...From a short-range viewpoint, it may be that news of bungled civilian defense in the U.S. may give momentary solace to the enemies of democracy. In the long run, it is certain that democracy's ability to publish such news and criticism will improve its ability to fight and preserve undiminished faith and courage. The dark flame of Winston Churchill's candor and its galvanic effect on the British people are mortally hated and feared by the Nazis, who try to conceal their mistakes until concealment becomes impossible...
...demise in Philadelphia newspaperdom last week underscored a harsh truism: U.S. magazine publishers have failed notoriously to publish successful newspapers. The long-sick Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger was ordered liquidated by a Federal District Court. With it disappears the last remnant of the would-be newspaper empire started 29 years ago by the late, great Cyrus Hermann Kotzschmar Curtis, genius of the Satevepost, Ladies' Home Journal, etc. His empire-building had cost $42,000,000 and he had bought, started or swallowed eight newspapers with a combined peak circulation of 848,000. But, like Frank Munsey and Bernarr Macfadden...