Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...view the order cancelling all air mail contracts with unmixed joy. Unfortunately, his telegram to Mr. Roosevelt was not appreciated by the President, who, oddly enough, felt that the former Boy Hero's motives were not entirely altruistic in spite of the fact that Lindbergh was thoughtful enough to publish the telegram prior to sending it so that Mr. Roosevelt could read all about it in the papers before he received...
Strictly speaking, Ulysses did not so much disembark as come out of hiding, garbed in new and respectable garments. Ever since 1922, when the first edition of Ulysses was published in Paris, hundreds of U. S. citizens have smuggled copies through the customs or bought them from bookleggers. But this week, on the strength of Federal Judge John Munro Woolsey's decision that Ulysses is not obscene (TIME, Dec. 18), Random House was able to publish the first edition of the book ever legally printed in any English-speaking country...
...Goebbels would carve all the States of Germany up into districts ruled from Berlin. Herr Hitler is said to favor this plan. Last week Dr. Goebbels compelled every German paper to publish accounts of a supposedly idyllic meeting between Chancellor and President. Old Paul declared that Gentle Adolf "within a short period" has put the German people through a "complete mental and spiritual rebirth" and given them "new zest...
...especially my admiration for your willingness to publish in Letters any reasonable proof of your errors in reporting, thereby correcting the impressions remaining in readers' minds...
...slogan printed everywhere, "Il Duce is never wrong!" Once an editor, II Duce realizes that the details of his press domination are best kept secret from countries in which journalism is still a free profession. Last week Manhattan's anti-Fascist daily La Stampa Libera was able to publish copies of a smuggled series of daily orders released to the Press of Italy last summer from the Dictator's press bureau whose head is now his handsome son-in-law. Count Galeazzo Ciano. To a Fascist the orders would seem merely right & proper. To U. S. newspaperdom, resentful...