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...Wall Street and publishing circles know by now, Smith is really George J.W. Good man, 38, a former Rhodes scholar, journalist (TIME, FORTUNE), novelist and screenwriter (The Wheeler Dealers). Considerably less well known is Good man's latest interest, a monthly financial magazine called the Institutional Investor (circ. 21,000). Despite its forbidding name, I-I is the brightest addition to the marketplace since one of The Mon ey Game's financial wizards, "Scarsdale Fats," first appeared in the Sunday mag azine of the late New York World Jour nal Tribune...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Son of Scarsdale Fats | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

...Miami Herald is not only Flor ida's largest newspaper (circ. 369,000) but a most outspoken crusader against crime and corruption. Three years ago, its chronic complaints about law en forcement in the Miami area were directed at Dade County State Attorney Richard Gerstein, the powerful and popular (if unsuccessful) prosecutor of Candy Mossier, ex-president of the Na tional District Attorneys' Association and much-decorated B-17 navigator. The Herald often wondered aloud why Ger stein kept turning up at race tracks, gam bling casinos in the Bahamas, and the Miami area's less savory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: There Go De Judge | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

...Bribe Needed. The Herald's ri val, the Miami News (circ. 94,000), came to a different conclusion. The News' editorial staff has long sought a way out of the shadow of its larger competitor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: There Go De Judge | 11/15/1968 | See Source »

...ever a lone ranger has ridden out of the West, it is the tiny (circ. 7,000), fearless Texas Observer. In 14 stormy fears, the Austin-based biweekly paper las tangled singlehanded with oil and gas interests, exposed statehouse scandals, often made life painful for politicians in the land of Lyndon. The Observer's founder is Ronnie Dugger, a prodding, provocative University of Texas graduate who came back from one year at Oxford with a passion to unmask corruption and hypocrisy. With a number of equally talented and brash companions, Dugger has made his influence felt far beyond...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: The Lone Ranger Rides Again | 9/27/1968 | See Source »

...that have also broken with mainstream Protestant churches on the issue of membership in the World Council. The biggest U.S. member is the General Association of Regular Baptist Churches, which has 1,300 congregations and 180,000 worshipers. Mclntire spreads his gospel through a weekly paper, the Christian Beacon (circ. 120,000), and a Monday-Friday radio program broadcast over 635 stations. Mclntire and his co-crusaders also run a four-year liberal arts college in Cape May and a seminary in Elkins Park, Pa. The cause is financed by contributions, totaling $3,000,000 last year, from Mclntire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Protestants: The Crusaders of Cape May | 9/6/1968 | See Source »

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