Word: circe
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
With a trumpeting of Page One headlines, the New York Post (circ. 390,000) last week launched a series on Hearst Columnist Walter Winchell, "probably the biggest success story in American journalism." To the Post, which has been feuding with Winchell for months, it was a success story without a hero...
...houses." HOUSE & HOME, published by TIME Inc., is an outgrowth of ARCHITECTURAL FORUM, THE MAGAZINE OF BUILDING, which has been split into two separate magazines to provide better coverage of the fast-growing building industry. HOUSE & HOME is published for residential building, while its sister publication, ARCHITECTURAL FORUM (circ. 45,000), will cover all other types of building (industrial, commercial, etc.). The monthly magazines will come out alternately, one every two weeks. HOUSE & HOME guaranteed its advertisers a trade circulation of 60,000, was such a success even before the first issue came off the press that it had more...
...members all over the world. The I.P.I. has now set up national committees of editors in 24 countries, and a permanent director has taken over at the institute's headquarters in Zurich. The director: E. J. B. Rose, 42, formerly literary editor of the London Sunday Observer (circ. 430,000), an Oxford man who was an R.A.F. wing commander during the war and later manager of Reuters features...
When Collier's devoted a whole issue to defeating Russia, in its own preview of World War III ten weeks ago, it thought it had hit a journalistic jackpot. Collier's (circ. 3,150,000) sold an extra 500,000 copies (TIME, Oct. 29) and planned to cash in further by fighting "The War We Do Not Want" all over again in book form. By last week, the jackpot began to turn out wooden nickels. Simon & Schuster, which had contracted to publish the book, dropped the project. Reason: three of Collier's star "correspondents...
When one newspaper in a city buys another, it is usually the big paper that takes over the smaller competitor. In Cincinnati last week, the roles were reversed. The smaller afternoon Times-Star (circ. 152,040) was ready to buy the first-place Enquirer, Cincinnati's biggest newspaper, (circ. 185,352 daily, 273,804 Sunday). The Times-Star and Scripps-Howard's Cincinnati Post (circ. 153,283) are neck & neck rivals for second place behind the Enquirer...