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Word: hellboxes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...International Typographical Union has been getting into contracts since 1871. In its broadest application, bogus compels a newspaper to employ workers to reset the advertisements that have been received and used in mat or plate form. The reset ad is worthless, often consigned at once to the composing-room hellbox for remelting. On the Washington Post and Times Herald, I.T.U. men last week were resetting ads that actually ran in 1957. The New York Times estimated that it dead-horsed 5,750,000 lines of display advertising last year alone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Bogus Man | 5/11/1959 | See Source »

Nevertheless, some editors still play the news in the way that (they were taught) will sell papers. They still give a quarter of their space to sports. If it means throwing U.N. into the hellbox, they find room for the day's crimes, knowing that the Sunday News of the World (circ. 7,500,000) was built on news of the half-world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Memo on Fleet Street | 12/15/1947 | See Source »

...HELLBOX (210 pp.)-John O'Hara- Random House...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Ugly Moments | 8/11/1947 | See Source »

...hellbox, as the publishers helpfully note on the jacket, is the place where printers throw broken type. These 26 stories by John O'Hara (an Old Newspaperman himself) have the neat and durable ring of O'Hara's best writing. They also have O'Hara's special effect of making the reader feel he has bitten something brassy. To O'Hara's hopeful admirers the stories may look like 26 more notes for the novel they think he ought to write-and, from that point of view, wasted sticks of type...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Ugly Moments | 8/11/1947 | See Source »

...book is a hellbox in a wider sense: about two-thirds of the stories record brief episodes of evil. O'Hara is an expert at ugly moments, probably the best expert in contemporary U.S. writing. Like many of his stones, these have such painful audibility that they make life itself seem an ugly moment unduly prolonged. The figures in his Inferno are mainly Broadway, Hollywood and resort people with a few professional criminals thrown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Ugly Moments | 8/11/1947 | See Source »

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