Word: columns
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...giving the electoral vote of the South to the Republican party seems remote to Knox, although he said, "I believe that Florida, North Carolina, and Texas are very doubtful at the present time, and that there is a good chance for them to swing to the G. O. P. column in November. Furthermore, although this is just speculation, I believe that Al Smith's speech in Washington lost at least a million votes for Roosevelt...
...publish Vanderbilt's Los Angeles tabloid. Publisher Boddy made good his sales talk by building the Illustrated Daily News into one of the Coast's outstanding newspapers, noted for its bold and colorful handling of the news, the advanced economic views presented by Publisher Boddy in his column, "Views of the News." First daily newspaper publisher to take Technocracy seriously, Columnist Boddy is now plumping hard for Social Credit...
When the readers of the Herald Tribune opened their papers one day last week they found an eight-column streamer headline: END OF ECONOMIC CRISIS. Beneath it, crowding the whole page with small, close-packed type and spilling over into an extra column, was advertised a cure-all for the world's ills. At the top of one column appeared a photograph of the nostrum's author, Anatole de la Marti. After plowing through a column or two. most readers were too dazed to proceed. But the gist of M. de la Marti's plan...
...great newspapers, the Christian Science Monitor. Because it tries to be "An International Newspaper," intelligent Bostonians who wanted the Monitor's national and foreign coverage have had either to go without most local news or buy another paper. Two years ago the Monitor began printing a daily column of Boston items. Since then local circulation has jumped from...
Last week Boston & New England readers got a whole new section of their own. Local news is briefly reviewed in a six-column, half-page box, dressed up with ordinary and candid photographs, flanked by two longer stories. Other features: weather, radio, finance, amusement, political doings ("Up & Down Beacon Hill"). Space remains for what has always been a vexing Monitor problem: local advertising...