Word: published
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...fore at a prior date? Ludicrous, indeed, is the thought that a Washington editor, in the guise of a spectator, must tell the police where to look for the criminal. Can it be that this paper is so dedicated to an impossible program of neutrality, that it hates to publish the intimate truth unless the outside world first backs it up? If I believed that last statement, I would take to cancel my subscription (which, by the way is not paid...
Threatening legal action if Mrs. Patrick Campbell's executors publish his 125 love letters to the late, great actress before he dies, whiskery old George Bernard Shaw pshawed: "Forty-five years ago, everybody wrote love letters to Mrs. Campbell. I know she thought mine the best of the bunch, though personally I thought those of Burne-Jones more interesting. . . . Before the copyright expires they will, I hope, provide for the education of Mrs. Campbell's great-grandchildren, but they must wait till the old gentlemen who wrote them can no longer make them ridiculous by their white hairs...
...bought an abandoned box factory on the outskirts of Noblesville, started the Fellowship Press. From Asheville, N. C., he imported presses on which Fascist Pelley used to turn out his defunct Silvershirt organ, Liberation. He denied that Pelley had any connection with Fellowship Press, later admitted that he would publish Pelley's treatise on "metaphysics and esoterics...
...magazine, a literary magazine in particular, on the eve of war is a perilous venture, yet this is what has been undertaken by the editors of Trend, the University of Chicago's latest publication. As a mouthpiece for all of America's "up and coming" writers, Trend will publish works of students from all universities (the first issue contains a poem by Harvard's John Crockett) alongside of contributions from nationally known literary figures. The editors wish to bring together all the writers "who are trying to do new and vigorous things in verse and prose" and, simultaneously, to publish...
...Hoover Administration, although the President had twice sent messages urging its ratification. Last week he let it be known that he would bring up the Seaway again, in time for his prospective honeymoon with Congress during the third Administration. He had Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle publish the banns. In Detroit Mr. Berle read a Presidential message to a conference of Seaway supporters: "The United States needs the St. Lawrence Seaway for defense . . . tremendously needs the power project which will form a link in the Seaway . . . to produce aluminum and more aluminum for the airplane program which will assure...