Word: reprints
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Soon summer, working, lolling around, nothing to do, relaxing, no antiwar activity, no watching the papers for the latest horror story, and at the end of the summer a CRIMSON executive saw that I had planned to reprint our editorial in support of the NLF in the Freshman Pre-Registration Issue and told me not to: "I think a lot of people have changed their minds since we passed that." A quiet fall, punctuated by renewed bombing of the North. Law boards. "It-really-isn't-so-bad, maybe-I-can-find-a-way-to-have-a-decent-life...
...blunt, I am embarrassed for you Certainly there's room for constructive criticism of Yale- as well as of Harvard. But the best "revenge" the Yalie Daily could have against you for that article would be to reprint its full text in their next issue. David L. Miller, Yale...
TIME's readers respond to each issue in many ways: they write letters to the editor, ask for further information, and increasingly request permission to reprint TIME stories. Not every request is granted; we do not, for example, permit the use of TIME editorial material for commercial purposes. Nor do we reprint on a regular, week-to-week basis, but rather when readers demonstrate unusual interest in particular stories...
Although requests are sparked by many different sections, one of the greatest catalysts is the Essay. "On Being an American Parent" (Dec. 15, 1967) drew requests for 5,000 reprints from church and P.T.A. groups. The Alumni Association of Columbia College alone asked for 25,000 reprints of "Why Those Students Are Protesting" (May 3, 1968). "What Can I Do?" (May 17, 1968), on the problem of civil rights, drew requests for 35,000 copies. Our cover story on "Drugs and the Young" (Sept. 26, 1969) has so far brought requests for 3,000 copies. But perhaps our most unusual...
...Brian Brown. "The drug problem is real, but teachers didn't know how to handle the subject because there was nothing definitive available," says Brown. Another sign was the response to TIME'S Sept. 26 cover on drugs: In addition to several thousand requests for permission to reprint, we were gratified to hear of one suburban teen-ager who told her mother: "If you read only one thing about drugs, read TIME'S cover." The new pamphlet is a collaboration between TIME Contributing Editor Christopher Cory, who wrote the original cover story, and Public Affairs' Raymond...