Word: hearsts
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Hearst Obit...
Here is what happened. When Publisher Hearst died Tuesday the TIME presses in Chicago, Philadelphia and Los Angeles were clicking out 70,000 copies an hour. As fast as the early-run magazines rolled off, they were bundled into trucks and trains for distant points. Since Hearst's death, a major news event, was reported before a quarter of TIME'S U.S. distribution was on its way to readers, the editors ordered the presses stopped...
...their Tuesday-Wednesday weekend, converged on the building. The basic story had been written for some time, but it needed updating and final editing. The Los Angeles bureau was on the wire most of the afternoon, flashed in late news from Beverly Hills, checked last-minute points on the Hearst empire...
...Harlingen subscribers or any of the other 450,000 readers who got the early edition can get TIME'S story on Newsman Hearst by writing...
...executive under W.R. for the past ten years. Massive, dressy Dick Berlin, 57, got his start as a shipping clerk after a high-school education in his native Omaha. Full of Irish charm and aggressiveness, he served as a World War I naval lieutenant, began his career in the Hearst organization, without knowing it, when he met Mrs. Hearst at a party given for World War I servicemen. Charmed with Lieut. Berlin, Mrs. Hearst got him a postwar job selling advertising for Hearst's Motor Boating magazine. He was such a star salesman that he rose to be general...