Word: publishing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Teilhard's life was branded with personal disappointment. He loved his native France as much as his scientific research, but obeyed when his superiors exiled him to long years of field work in Asia and Africa. His order also forbade him to teach or publish his nontechnical writing on evolution and theology-partly to spare him censure from the Holy Office. Nonetheless, Teilhard never lost his boundless optimism, which pulsates through the latest of his posthumous works, a collection of 22 essays called The Future of Man (Harper...
...controversy threatens to widen when the Faculty takes up other cases next week. In some instances, failure to publish is coupled with other criticisms...
...pages, young writers early discovered a consistent welcome-a fact due in part to the Atlantic's incapacity to pay rates that would attract established authors. Fifty Grand, the first Hemingway story to be published by a major U.S. magazine, appeared in the Atlantic in 1927-after Cosmopolitan, the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's and Scribner's had turned it down. Unwilling to rely solely on the editorial vision of literary agents, the Atlantic carefully read every unsolicited manuscript, a habit that persists to this day. "We publish more unsolicited material than any other national periodical," says...
...remarkable family in American history made sure its good deeds did not go unrecorded. All the prominent Adamses of Massachusetts kept voluminous diaries in which they quarreled with their enemies, justified their own acts, occasionally fell into despair or soared into poetry. As part of its mammoth project to publish the Adams family papers, Harvard University Press has already brought out four volumes of John Adams' diaries. Now it is Charles Francis Adams' turn...
...probability, the criticism was no life-or-death matter for Yang or Chou. But disgrace was doom enough for the pair since it presumably means they will publish no more books and teach no more classes. Which might go to prove their point that even the class struggle has its limits...