Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...surprise of the staff, the biggest news at Hearst's Chicago American last week broke on its city-room bulletin board: the American, with an afternoon circulation of 524,823 and a Sunday edition of 706,407, had been sold to the Chicago Tribune. The Trib announced that the American would go on publishing with its present management. Reported price: about $12 million, which newsmen called "fantastically high...
...circulation mounted to 700,000, Gauvreau posted a bulletin-board communique: "The circulation ... is tearing the guts out of the presses. This has resulted from my policy of sensationalism. Any man who cannot be yellow has no place on the staff...
...conceding that the tests could be continued for thirty years at the present rate without damage. However, Ralph Lapp, the eminent nuclear physicist, has recently found an error of a factor of forty in the rate of accumulation of this deadly poison. In an article in the October Bulletin of the Atom Scientists Lapp points out that the government report from which the conclusions of the administration were drawn is in error in two respects...
...four hours the departure was kept secret, then a brief bulletin issued by the Tanjug agency broke the news to a startled Yugoslavia and a wondering world. Eight days earlier Khrushchev had flown just as suddenly into Belgrade, under the thin pretense of taking a vacation (TIME, Oct. 1), and had remained in close conclave with Tito. The flight to Yalta provoked wide and wild speculation in the world's capitals. Western diplomats, normally an "I told you so" lot, frankly confessed bafflement. None offered a better guess as to its cause than that of one Belgrader: "Something serious...
...Such a change of policy would not only alleviate many of the day-to-day grievances of the citizen, but also change his basic image of the regime as a harsh and depriving force."This propaganda poster was pinned on a Moscow school's bulletin board. The large letters say "I could not study, so I sold newspapers." In small print it goes on to say: "Study is an unattainable dream for children living in capitalist countries. In such large countries as America, England, and France, one must pay for tuition and therefore almost no new schools are ever built...