Word: publisher
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Argentine Government, which had banned TIME (TIME, Nov. 29), back-crawled last fortnight. After TIME announced that it also intended to publish in Brazil, the totalitarian Argentine Government blandly announced that a mistake had been made. TIME may resume printing in Buenos Aires, may again use Argentine mails if one condition is met: TIME must not contain "bad" stories (like this...
Last week orders were pouring into Account No. 123 at the rate of 50 a day, with no books available. Duell, Sloane & Pearce was preparing to publish a commercial edition this month...
Hollington Tong plans to have the cubs publish a newspaper. U.S. newsmen in Chungking last week were wondering how closely such a sheet could resemble a free press. Chungking is as bound by censorship as it is by mud. Its newspapers have been forbidden to discuss such glaring but officially nonexistent topics as inflation...
Newest arm of enforcement is publicity. Some draft boards have long been posting the names of delinquents. Last week Selective Service announced that, in addition to popping all delinquents aged 18 to 38 directly into 1-A, all local boards would be asked to publish delinquent names monthly, thus try to shame backsliders into righting their score...
Ever since he started to publish rhymes (circa 1885), Rudyard Kipling has been one of the world's most read and most neglected poets. Americans and Britons who would not be found dead with a book of poems in their pockets read Kipling-worse, they memorized whole stanzas. A graduating class in a U.S. college which did not name Kipling's If- as its favorite poem might be presumed to have something wrong with...