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Thus overlooking many other important events of the twelve months past, we wash the printer's ink from our hands and make our exit, thanking our readers for their interest and for their tolerance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In Retrospect | 1/30/1956 | See Source »

...University Printing Office is making substantial savings this year by printing many of the mid-year exams by photo-offset rather than letter press, Sargent Kennedy '28, Registrar, said yesterday. All the exams which have "clean copy" when handed to the printer are reproduced photographically, instead of setting them up in type and printing them on the familiar small, manila sheets, he explained...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Exam Printing Costs Cut | 1/27/1956 | See Source »

...whose enthusiasm for the poets' corner has been obscured until now by his zest for cornering corporate stocks (TIME July 25). Yet for years, Lannan has wooed the muse with unpublished verse and unpublicized donations to Poetry. When he learned that the magazine might succumb to an unpaid printer's bill he determined to give it all the benefits of high-pressure, big-business promotion. "I could have just given them $25,000 " he explained, "but that would have been the easy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Corner in Poetry | 11/21/1955 | See Source »

...Publishing, like banking," according to one Boston editor, "requires nothing more than a desk and a telephone. The printer will take care of the rest of the job." But thousands of manuscripts may cross his desk each year. The editor must have a working knowledge of a wide range of fields--from the kitchen or the horse-show to details of life in Paris or Calcutta. He must be able to help the author with suggestions. And more important, from his company's point of view, he must constantly seek new talent and encourage established writers. "An editor who doesn...

Author: By David H. Rhinelander, | Title: Publishing in Boston: Tracts to Textbooks | 11/4/1955 | See Source »

...Park Street, around the corner from Little, Brown are the editorial offices of Houghton-Mifflin, whose trade division is headed by Paul Brooks '31. H. M. started as a book-store over a hundred years ago, joined with a printer, and, under a succession of names, has come down to the present as one of the most stable and respected publishers in the nation...

Author: By David H. Rhinelander, | Title: Publishing in Boston: Tracts to Textbooks | 11/4/1955 | See Source »

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