Word: publishers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Stevens began to publish the magazine "Poetry," for which he has won two prizes. He also was awarded the Bollingen Prize from the Yale University Library in 1949. Among his works are "Harmonium," a collection of lyric poems, "Auroras of Autumn," and several plays...
...Radcliffe News can survive without compulsory subscription. Reliable rumors, which have never been denied by the News, report that the News has accumulated a very substantial bank account during its four years under compulsory subscription, an amount which, with advertising revenue, could publish the News for a long period without any circulation revenue whatsoever. Why has the News never denied these rumors? Why has it refused to release to the voters a dollars and cents financial accounting, instead of attempting to stampede them with crocodile tears about its impending demise...
...community interest. The College has a chapter of the NAACP and the Students for Democratic Action; it has a Young Progressives of America and International Relations Club. Significant as it may be, an examination of the College's official handbook reveals no mention of a Young Republican group. Students publish a weekly newspaper, the Campus; a biannual literary magazine called Dimensions; and a Yearbook...
This week the $513 million Ford Foundation announced that it is going into the magazine business. Starting in October, the foundation will publish Perspectives U.S.A., a quarterly designed to show people outside the U.S. that "Americans can think as well as chew gum." The magazine, a pet project of the foundation's Associate Director Robert Hutchins, will be uncompromisingly highbrow, and will run original articles and reprints on literature, music, theater, history, philosophy, plus American poetry, fiction, and art. There will be no advertising, propaganda or politics. It will be printed abroad, at first in English, French, German...
...charity. She still contributes heavily. But although she is a wealthy woman, having inherited more than $1,000,000 from the Roosevelt estate, she tries frugally to preserve her capital. Her trip to India was no exception: she did not undertake it until Harper & Brothers had agreed to publish a book of her impressions and thus, in effect, underwrite her expenses...