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...real life in a dark cellar in Kazan where he became a member of the Russian Social Democratic Party (Bolshevik faction). At 19 he was exiled to the Arctic (30 years later he jailed the policeman who had arrested him). By 1912 he was helping Joseph Stalin to edit a small sheet called Pravda, and by 1917 he had risen to a dizzy revolutionary height where Lenin himself noticed Molotov; Lenin called him "the best file clerk in Russia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONFERENCES: Old Rock Bottom | 8/19/1946 | See Source »

...Collier's its 2,846,052 circulation: slight, slick fiction; articles serious in subject, light in treatment; the simple, direct editorials of Reuben Maury who (for a price) writes another kind for the late Joe Patterson's New York Daily News. Says Editor Davenport: "I intend to edit the magazine from a reporter's viewpoint. No ivory tower...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: In a Corner, on the 13th Floor | 7/22/1946 | See Source »

...knife was not necessary-a painless remedy had been found. The remedy: a new A.M.A. public-relations section which would take over Fishbein's job of damning Government medical care. It would also plug for private medical prepayment plans to forestall Federal health insurance. Dr. Fishbein would still edit the A.M.A. Journal, Hygeia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Remedy for Fishbein | 7/15/1946 | See Source »

Last week leisurely "X" had its tempo jolted. Curtis' first postwar baby, Holiday, was ailing and in need of transfusions. Curtis President Walter D. Fuller raided "X", transferred its editor, natty, 44-year-old Manhattan Adman Ted Patrick,* to edit Holiday. Fuller also dug into what Patrick called his "terrific staff" of "X"-men, many recruited from Yank and OWI. Holiday, Curtis' flashily upholstered but unexciting travel magazine, had dropped from a first-appearance (TIME, Feb. 25) sale of 450,000 to 400,000 (about half of them pre-publication trial subscribers), and newsstand returns were heavy. Fuller...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Holiday Troubles | 7/8/1946 | See Source »

...TIME'S editors manage to take a yearly junket or two in the U.S. or overseas to whet their working knowledge of the countries and things they write about-but not the Managing Editor. He's stuck. Among a host of other duties, he has to edit every piece of copy that goes into TIME each week (he has, he says, a basilisk's eye complicated by journalist's cataract). So it was good news to me that T. S. Matthews had gotten away for a week's trip by chartered plane to the Pacific...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jul. 1, 1946 | 7/1/1946 | See Source »

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