Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Reliable sources indicated last night that the News will break a newly-established precedent this weekend and publish one of its rare Saturday editions...
Since its inception in 1861, the Historical Division of the State Department has worked on a non-partisan basis to compile and publish complete records of United States foreign policy. Until World War I this job was neither a particularly big nor important one. The Division had no difficulties in keeping the records up to date simply because of the relatively minor role this country played in international affairs...
...lack of undergraduate vigor at Yale became only too clear last year in the Daily's weak-kneed failure to publish on Saturdays. Anyone might have expected this moral irresolution at Yale, but we view with astonishment the present inadequacies of those impeccable gentlemen from New Jersey. The Daily Princetonian has been parodied at least three times in the last three years, and the Tiger has not retaliated. Even when Princeton's proud flag disappeared, our kittenish friends did nothing to redeem this disgrace...
...small though significant Boston firm, the Beacon Press, frequently sets out "to take a beating" on a book which "deserves to be published," in the words of its editor Melvin Arnold. Sponsored by the American Unitarian Association, the house publishes no more than 20 cloth-bound books a year. But its influence far outweighs its size. "Specializing in public controversy," according to Arnold, the Beacon Press was founded in the nineteenth century to publish sermons, and it still prints "books that we feel should be published." Among the better known of its recent polemics were Paul Blanshard's attack...
...their statement of policy in the first issue, the editors say they "will publish signed articles by leading Republicans and will reprint articles of interest from prominent national magazines...