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...Stern (circ. 1.87 million) this week will publish the first of numerous installments from the black leather-bound diaries, which date from June 1932, seven months before Hitler became Germany's Chancellor, to mid-April 1945, just two weeks before his death and the fall of the Third Reich. Each volume contains from 75 to 100 pages, written in black ink, many bearing Hitler's signature at the bottom. Upon completion, each diary was wrapped with a thin red cord and sealed with a red wax imprint of the swastika...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Black Ink and Red Wax Swastikas | 5/2/1983 | See Source »

...advertisers, who have already signed up to buy 600 pages this year, the magazine provides a relatively affluent readership. TV-CABLE WEEK is competing for advertisers and indirectly for readers with the nation's largest weekly, TV Guide (circ. 17 million). TV Guide publishes 107 regional editions; in the past year it has increased its cable coverage to 40% of the listings space. But it is not system-specific. Publishing industry analysts reason that there is room for both weeklies. Said J. Kendrick Noble of Paine Webber Mitchell Hutchins: "The new magazine could become the principal TV directory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Hooking Up to Cable Households | 4/18/1983 | See Source »

...censor addressing students in Tel Aviv had no idea that Nurit Dovrat, a reporter for the daily Ma'ariv (circ. 200,000) was taking notes of his remarks. When her story about the speech appeared last week, after the name of the talkative censor and some of his other remarks had been deleted by a more prudent Israeli censor, the news set off a clatter of protest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Blue Pencil | 4/4/1983 | See Source »

...insurgents' assault intensified dramatically in January with a media one-two punch. First came a piece in Reader's Digest (circ. 17.9 million), then a broadside from the top-rated CBS-TV show 60 Minutes (audience: 22.9 million households). In a scene that Protestant leaders were to denounce as unrepresentative, cameras panned a Methodist church in Logansport, Ind., and Correspondent Morley Safer intoned that members had discovered that some collection-plate money was being spent "on causes that seem closer to the Soviet-Cuban view of the world than Logansport...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Warring over Where Donations Go | 3/28/1983 | See Source »

...ongoing battle of British royalty vs. the press, Queen Elizabeth II has won a decisive round. After Australian Publisher Rupert Murdoch's splashy London tabloid the Sun (circ. 4.2 million) ran the first installment of confessions by a former palace pantry servant, the Queen took the unprecedented step of suing Murdoch's news organization and her onetime employee for damages. In an out-of-court settlement last week, the Sun agreed to pay the $6,000 it would have given the ex-servant and he ponied up his $150 advance, all of which the Queen donated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Mar. 14, 1983 | 3/14/1983 | See Source »

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