Word: globe
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Hearstpapers throughout the land last fortnight, readers beheld a new column of news notes headed "The Globe Trotter." Radiowners were told they might tune in and hear "The Globe Trotter" relate his stories in more detail. At newsreel theatres were showing shots of the events thus Globe-Trotted. This ingenious coordination of press, radio and screen was the latest development of Hearst Metrotone News. The reels, distributed twice weekly by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, are prepared in Manhattan but can be modified to include events of local interest where they are displayed. The name of the "sponsoring" newspaper is worked into...
...stock exchanges. Alaska Juneau (the big Treadwell Mine), Dome Mines (of which Broker Jules Semon Bache is president), Mclntyre-Porcupine, Homestake, Tech-Hughes, are all selling near or above their 1930 highs. Another evidence of the fever is seen wherever there is a chance of gold being found. Globe, Ariz, bubbled with excitement last week on the report that the so-called "Lost Dutchman" mine in Superstition Mountain had been found again after 20 years. Several weeks ago more than 500 men, many jobless, were stampeded by a rumor of gold from Calgary to the bleak, cold Livingstone River Valley...
...upon which the YALE trademark must not appear. Newshawks snooped through Dunster and Lowell Houses, already completed, and reported that among many hundreds, only two outer Yale locks of the usual trademarked variety were in use. One seemed to be an accident, the other was a replacement. The Boston Globe headlined: UNIVERSITY HAS NO INTENTION OF GIVING RIVAL INSTITUTION ANY PUBLICITY FREE OF CHARGE...
Editor Kendall is 42, British-born. In 1907 he arrived in the U. S. to live, found he had enough money to carry him to St. Louis. There he went to work for Sherwin-Williams Co. (whose paint "covers the Globe";. From 1918 to 1923 he served as managing editor of Printers' Ink. In the spring of 1923 he decided the advertising world needed a new trade paper, founded Advertising Fortnightly, now called Advertising & Selling...
...close connection of the "Herald" with the big banking interests and the gradual sensationalization and cheapening of its news columns recently, within the outer shell of its respectable typography and make-up. It would be a pleasant boon to Bean-town if the good-natured but generally sloppy "Globe" could be prodded into over-coming its reluctance to tamper with its golden formula. It could be made into a first rate paper. And why should not the "Transcript" be chided into forsaking its snobbish contempt for the technical advances of the past quarter century in the newspaper world? In fact...