She wrote for the Toronto Week, and contributed a serial, "A Hazard of Hearts," to Frank Leslie's Monthly.
The film's title refers to an article of the same year by U.S. "drug czar" Harry J. Anslinger that appeared in The American Magazine and was reprinted in Reader's Digest in 1938.
Quillen wrote for such major periodicals such as the Baltimore Sun, the Saturday Evening Post, and The American Magazine, and he "took the greatest pride" in one-liners picked up by Literary Digest.
American | American Civil War | American Broadcasting Company | American football | African American | American Idol | American Revolutionary War | American Revolution | Billboard (magazine) | American Association for the Advancement of Science | American Red Cross | Time (magazine) | Vogue (magazine) | magazine | American Library Association | American Museum of Natural History | American Express | American Academy of Arts and Sciences | American League | American Association | American Heart Association | American comic book | American Institute of Architects | American Airlines | American Hockey League | Spanish-American War | Pan American Games | American Cancer Society | Whitney Museum of American Art | American Ballet Theatre |
He wrote frequently on the subject of current affairs and politics, and also wrote short stories for The Saturday Evening Post, Collier's Weekly, Cosmopolitan, The American Magazine and Liberty.
Her stories appeared in the Atlantic, The American Magazine, McClure's, Everybody's, Ladies' Home Journal and Woman's Home Companion, and she wrote 93 novels, many of which were best sellers.
The 2006 Fortune Global 500, published by the American magazine Fortune, ranked her as the 2nd most powerful women in Europe, behind Patricia Russo, future president of Alcatel-Lucent.
The work was serialized in 1928–29 in the American magazine, Woman's Home Companion, and the manuscript is on display in the Film Library of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
In May 2007, the American magazine Pollstar ranked the National Auditorium as the best concert venue in the world.
The concept of shibusa was introduced to the West in August and September, 1960, in publications of the American magazine House Beautiful.