Word: print
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...What Price Peace?" (TIME, July 21) is the most lucid rationalization of our position in the postwar world yet to appear in print...
...Passage to India (1924). The four other novels he wrote earlier, all fairly short ones, came in a feverish burst of activity-for him-between 1905 and 1910. The rest of his fiction includes only a dozen short stories, written before World War I and long out of print in the U.S. They have now been collected in one volume for the first time. Old as they are, they bear none of the scars of age; their disembodied timelessness is a witness to Forster's skill...
...hotelkeepers know, the safest picture to hang in a hotel bedroom is a flower print: it makes nobody mad, except an occasional connoisseur. That flower-painting can be as handsome and as accurate as Audubon's birds was proved last week in San Francisco...
Field didn't need the afternoon Times so much as he needed a place to print his morning Sun. Since it began, six years ago, the Sun has been a paying guest of the Chicago Daily News. At first, everything was fine. Marshall Field's Sun was out to wear down Bertie McCormick's monolithic Tribune. Always happy to stick an irritating finger in McCormick's glacial eye, the late Colonel Frank Knox quartered the Sun in his spacious Daily News plant, let it use his presses at night and was nice about the rent. Hardheaded...
...lively style, the Journal* does not run pictures. "We used to print little head cuts with the personnel notes," says one editor. "When we stopped, readership of the column went up." But the Journal is long on charts, graphs and maps. By aiming at the Main Streets of the U.S. as well as at Wall Street, its editors think they have distributed the risk in case of another depression. "Financial people are nice people, and all that," says Kilgore, "but there aren't enough of them to make this paper...