Word: hearstly
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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OFFER FREUD 25,000 DOLLARS OR ANYTHING HE NAME COME CHICAGO PSYCHOANALYZE LEOPOLD AND LOEB. For the same purpose, Hearst also offered Freud "any sum he cared to name" and also "was prepared to charter a special liner so that Freud could travel quite undisturbed by other company." Freud's refusals were chilling...
TIME'S Arkansas story sounds like a collaboration between Eleanor Roosevelt and Harriet Beecher Stowe as rewritten by a Hearst editor...
...sales-almost as much as the daily circulation of the morning Herald Tribune. In a city where death in the afternoon is a classic newspaper fate, the three have been scrambling to regain circulatory lifeblood. even if it means draining the other fellow's veins. This week Hearst's Journal-American (circ. 585.121) launched its boldest raid on rival circulation. At the cost of "close to $1,000,000" a year for more newsprint and personnel, the paper began running complete daily stock-market quotations-a reader-fetching feature hitherto monopolized in the afternoon by Scripps-Howard...
...Hearst's morning Record and evening American, the Herald, Traveler, morning and evening Globe...
...delight. One Grecian urn inspired John Keats to write the famed lines: " 'Beauty is truth, truth beauty'-that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know." In the next century the vases aroused the collector's instinct in the late William Randolph Hearst. He began buying in 1901, owned 400 when he died 50 years later. Last year New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art bought 65 of the Hearst vases, which have proved so popular that the Met is leaving them on special exhibition for a full year...