Word: reprint
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...book. Ancestors and Immigrants, is to show the origins of the battle. Her book focuses on the founding and flowering of the Immigration Restriction League, a Boston-based national organization which was eventually successful in having strict quotas placed on immigration. Although the new Phoenix paperback is only a reprint of the original Harvard Press edition, the book still deserves notice; it has aged well over the fifteen years since its original issue...
Athletic Director Robert Watson states in an article appearing in the January 31 Sports Illustrated that "We don't have any intention of going big-time and Gambril accepts this." In addition to sending a reprint of the article to all prospective 1972-73 swimmers, Gambril sends a sheet of corrections, or as he would put it, clarifications, including the statement. "I will always be trying to win National Championships. I accept the fact that Harvard will never and should never make a change in policy to admit an athlete whose only contribution might be to raise the level...
...should also look carefully at Environment, Heredity, and Intelligence, Harvard Educational Review, Reprint Series No. 2. You will find that the high heritability of I.Q. is generally accepted by virtually all workers who are conversant with the data on I.Q. and with the technical concept of heritability. They argue about details, but not about the large points...
...dimly recall a cover story on Emperor Hirohito that included some unusual instructions for respectful treatment of the magazine bearing his likeness. As background for understanding the position of the Emperor, would you reprint those instructions...
...Kisco, N.Y. After graduating from Columbia in 1919, Cerf bought his way into the book trade as a vice president of Boni & Liveright; in 1925 he borrowed from a wealthy uncle on Wall Street to buy the Modern Library from that failing firm for $200,000, later used its reprint profits to form a new company that would publish books at random, hence the name Random House. Despite his latter-day public reputation as syndicated humorist and smirking jokester of TV's What's My Line?, Cerf the publisher had a shrewd eye for quality: Random House...