Word: publisher
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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TIME was the first to publish a special edition for our troops in Australia (January 25, 1943); the first to publish a special edition in Hawaii for our armed forces in the Central Pacific (August 16, 1943). TIME was the first U.S. magazine to be published for our troops in Iran (September 13, 1943); the first to be published for our troops in the China-Burma-India theater (November 22,1943) ; the first to be published for our troops in the Middle East (January 24, 1944); the first to print a Pony Edition in Honolulu for fast distribution...
...course, even before Pearl Harbor TIME started the world's first plane-delivered magazine (TIME Air Express for Latin America), thereby bringing our troops in the Canal Zone and all over the Caribbean many news-days closer to home. TIME was also the first American magazine to publish in Mexico City (to get the news faster to Mexico and Central America), in Bogotá (to get the news faster to Brazil and Uruguay), and in Buenos Aires (to get the news faster to the Argentine). And a few months ago TIME, with its Scandinavian Edition printed in Stockholm, became...
Last month Manhattan's small, exclusive Dial Press announced that it would soon publish the original version of one of the century's most blush-provoking literary works. This hitherto unpublished draft of Lady Chatterley's Lover, the late David Herbert Lawrence's distinguished novel about a titled lady who deserted her aristocratic but impotent husband for the family gamekeeper, will be issued next month in a first printing of 15,000 copies at $2.75 the copy...
...will continue to enter new subscriptions promptly to our out-of-the-country editions-particularly those editions we publish for our armed forces overseas. For with so many soldiers and sailors and men in Government posts abroad writing us to say how much TIME'S news from home means to them, I am sure these are the new orders we should fill first...
...Only a handful of intellectuals have long enthused over his most famous novel, The Counterfeiters (a complex study of Parisian youth), his unblushing autobiography, If It Die, and his perennial personal Journals. But last week it looked as if 1944 was going to be Gide year in the U.S. Publisher Alfred Knopf planned to publish Gide's Imaginary Interviews (discussions of art and society written while Gide was in Vichy France). French publisher in exile Jacques Schiffrin was preparing a French edition of Gide's latest Journals (1939-1942), a translation of Shakespeare's Hamlet, which Gide...