Word: reprints
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Edward Powers, associate general counsel for the University, said he "couldn't understand why the Globe would basically reprint an article they ran a year ago." The Globe, along with other local newspapers, covered the losses when they were first reported a year and a half...
...press' hostility, he explains, was simply vanity. Many of the traveling press, he writes, "were still enraged that they hadn't predicted my selection for the candidate for Vice President" in 1968. There were objective reporters, of course--three pages of Go Quietty or Else are filled with a reprint of a William Rusher column from The Conservative Advocate...
...letter also says, "There is often confusion regarding the relationship between Harvard and Radcliffe" among tour guides and includes a reprint from the Radcliffe Guide outlining the historical and current relationship between the schools...
Jeffrey Wolcowitz, head section leader for Social Analysis 10, "Principles of Economics," said yesterday he contacted all publishers for the material in the "Readings/Workbook." The publishers occasionally charged a fee to let Harvard reprint the book at the Harvard Printing Office, he added...
...STYLISTIC weaknesses, The Jazz Makers would still be a sound if unexciting introduction to jazz were it not for another set of limitations. The Da Capo edition of The Jazz Makers is actually a reprint of a book published by Rinehart in 1957. Although Da Capo reveals this significant bit of information only in the copyright, the text proclaims its age on nearly every page. It is difficult to imagine a contemporary anthology of jazz personalities without Davis, Monk, Mingus, and Coltrane but the only modernists in The Jazz Makers are Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, both of whose innovations...