Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Foster Damon '14, President of the New England Poetry Club, and assistant in English, will publish on or about April 1, his collection of poems, entitled, "Astrolabe". The book, published by Harper Brothers, comes after ten year's of effort. It is Mr. Damon's first book of collected verse. In 1917, Mr. Damon was chosen as one of the eight original Harvard poets. The other poets were E. E. Cummings '15, J. R. Dos Passos '18, Robert Hillyer '17, R. S. Mitchell '15, W. A. Norris '17, Dudley Poore '17, and Cuthoert Wright...
Sirs: Last week the anniversary of the death of "the greatest Jew of modern times"- was recognized by many admiring people throughout the world (TiME, Mar. 7). Your tribute to the memory of this great, good man was to publish an article under the head EDUCATION, in which you pictured an attic recluse spending his leisure hours in demoniac glee watching spiders fight. The article reminds us of President Coolidge's Washington's Birthday address in which our worthy President took little cognizance of the truly great things that our First President embodied, and centred his attention...
...Judging from some of the communications you receive and publish, it would seem that if some folks ever catch cold in their sense of humor (or lack of it), O Boy, won't the undertakers be kept busy...
Vicente Blasco Ibanez, famed Spanish novelist: "The Italian firm which had contracted to publish my book The Muleteer of the Andes, was purchased recently by a Fascist. He dared not publish in the usual way a book by so prominent an anti-Fascist as myself. But neither did he wish to break my contract and pay me heavy damages. Therefore my book appeared last week with a bright red label stuck on the cover, reading: 'With pain at our heart we publish, in sheer respect for our contract, a new and most amusing book by that anti-Fascist swine...
...Dearborn Independent, subtitled the "Chronicler of the Neglected Truth," is a weekly magazine. Its present circulation is 383,000. It retails for five cents a copy or $1.50 a year; it contains no advertising; hence, it costs Henry Ford about $300,000 a year to publish it. It gives bits of information and advances the ideas of Mr. Ford. For example, the current issue contains such articles as: "A Preacher tells the Inside Story of Sinclair Lewis and his Preacher Book," "The Gibson Girl and Other Symbols of Yesterday" by Vachel Lindsay, "The True Story of Mary's Little...