Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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There was also an important codicil: Xerox would have no editorial control over the essay. If the company had disapproved of it, Esquire would have been free to publish it anyway−and keep the money. Says Salisbury: "I saw no ethical impediments to doing the piece. After all, big corporations like Xerox and Texaco commission operas and other cultural enterprises. Meanwhile, the poor magazines have been dwindling away over the years, and along with them the employment of writers." For its part, Esquire was equally unfazed by the unusual arrangement...
...year history. During negotiations Time Inc. had already reached agreement with the Guild on many benefits and improvements, but several major issues remain in dispute. The company regrets the strike action because it considered its contract proposals fair and generous. Throughout the strike, Time Inc will continue to publish, on the usual schedule, all its magazines-TIME, FORTUNE, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, PEOPLE, MONEY -as well as TIME-LIFE Books...
...issue, called "Message to America." Giscard's message-which, among other things, is that the U.S. is seen as a land of "enterprise, initiative, movement" and "prodigious resiliency"-was the first in a series of letters written for TIME by foreign leaders that we plan to publish periodically as part of our Bicentennial observance. The series is intended to offer Americans a rare perspective on how others see them, as well as provide friends and critics of the U.S. with an opportunity to speak directly to our 25 million readers in America and elsewhere. In a letter inviting...
...ordinary patient. He was William A. Nolen, M.D., author of the 1970 bestseller The Making of a Surgeon, a startlingly candid behind-the-scenes account of his surgical apprenticeship at New York's Bellevue Hospital, and other popular books. Not one to miss an opportunity to publish, the articulate Litchfield, Minn., surgeon has now made the most of his unfamiliar position at the other end of the scalpel. In a new book titled Surgeon Under the Knife (Coward, McCann & Geoghegan; $8.95), Nolen tells an exciting life-and-death story-his own-and also provides useful insights that should help...
...fail to discern the sense of offended egalitarianism and outraged activism that informs each of the four or five pieces written by your correspondents. Indeed it is a response to the important events and significant injustices that do occur in the community; the University Daily should not hesitate to publish such stories in an informed, responsible and if need be, dramatic fashion...