Word: publishers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Biologists, interested in the tiny marine organisms called ascidians, heard good news from Tokyo: this summer Emperor Hirohito will publish his second book on marine life, Ascidians of Sagami Bay, the result of four years' research and 20 years of specimen collecting in which he discov ered 21 new species. His first book. Opisthobranchia of Sagami, published four years ago, was a bestseller among marine biologists...
...accordance with its examination period policy, the CRIMSON will not publish tomorrow. The paper will appear again on Thursday and Saturday and three times next week. Daily publication will resume January...
Purges. The Ukrainians, 40 million strong and proud of their own mother tongue, have a local patriotism as fierce as any Scot's. "For many centuries," Khrushchev himself once proclaimed, "the Ukrainian people fought for the right to develop their own culture, build their own schools, publish their own literature . . ." Yet it was to root out just such "bourgeois nonconformity" that Khrushchev was sent to Kiev in 1938. Characteristically, he started with a purge, not only of the "enemies of the people" (i.e., Ukrainian patriots) but of "all Communists who have lost their vigilance." Three thousand local party secretaries...
...crusty enough record for any newspaper. For a college enterprise, it is remarkable. This piece of unsolicited applause naturally leads to the question of who, beyond the characters within 14 Plympton Street, are responsible for this longevity. College journals, after all, do not just happen. To survive, they must publish in a tolerant atmosphere, one tolerant at least of what the incipient newsmen are trying...
...under the Japanese occupation. Laurel has repeatedly explained that his Actions were inspired by General Mac-Arthur, who sent word that he wanted him to stay behind to assuage the suffering of the Filipinos under the Japanese. Laurel has gone into detail in his memoirs but nowjj-efuses to publish them, because "I'm afra'd I was too bitter when I wrote them." Laurel has spent 41 of his 61 years in public life. His party has control of the Senate, but he insists that he has no ambition to be President. "The happy...