Word: publishers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...academic year. In addition there are 100 "members" who stay at the Institute only a year or two. Also chosen by the Institute's professors, members get $15,000 or less, scaled to the size of their family and outside income. Neither professors nor members are required to publish the results of their speculations...
...today the magazine is still the most profitable entry in a bulging portfolio that boasts ten magazines and numerous other enterprises. His book division's products vary from the California Angels Yearbook (50?) to the handsomely bound Mr. Rifleman ($12.50), and last month he announced plans to publish automotive and hobby paperbacks with the New American Library. His film production company has an hour color special, "The Wonderful World of Wheels," scheduled for September airing on CBS. He is a large stockholder in the Riverside, Calif., International Raceway; he is part owner of a 470,000-acre cattle ranch...
While other undergraduate organizations produce plays or publish journals, the members of Harvard's 11 Final Clubs devote their energies to maintaining a refuge from such endeavors. For the more conscientious members of the more conscientious members of the more prestigious clubs, it can turn into a full-time occupation...
...main excuse for the magazines, said Garlington, is that writers need a place to publish. For a typical issue, Garlington reported, he has 900 submitted essays, short stories and poems to choose from. In addition, "the Mississippi of mediocrity," as The Sixties' Bly put it, "has deepened lately because the colleges have found literary magazines useful for their prestige," and cheap at the price-as little as $10,000 a year. "The cost is comparatively low in view of athletic budgets," noted Colorado's Carter wryly...
...Arthur M. Schleinger Jr. describes in A Thousand Days Reston recommended that the Times not publish a story Tad Szule filed from Miami in 1961 reporting that a landing on Cuba seemed imminent. "Reston counselled against publication: either the story would alter Castro, in which case the Times would be responsible for casualties on the beach, or else the expidition would be cancelled in which case the Times would be responsible for grave interference with national policy...