Word: inserts
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Gwaltney got the idea for something like the Chronicle in 1957, when he was editor of the Johns Hopkins alumni magazine. At that time, he helped fashion an insert dealing with various national issues in education. The supplement took off and soon reached a circulation of 2.4 million. In an effort to widen his focus, Gwaltney left the Hopkins magazine and got a grant from the Carnegie Foundation "to find out," as he puts it, "what information educators needed and weren't getting." In 1966 he began publishing the Chronicle. Last July the paper finally moved into the black...
...published in the program for the Handel. It is far too much to ask of a performer that his audience listen in total ignorance of the words. This neglect is even more glaring in light of the orchestra's willingness to publish the original soloist's biography on an insert that could have been put to better...
...second round was nearly a repeat of the first, except Coach Edo Marion decided to insert seven of his J.V. players into the lineup...
...readily recognizable context: the Mod-Rocker wars of the middle sixties. From which wars sprung The Who, among many. While Tommy's hollow symbolism may have destroyed its viability, Quadrophenia's Jimmy is accessible thematically and physically, as far as two dimensions will carry him. The picture book insert not only fleshes out the scenario, but gives the listener an almost tangible hero. At the same time there is that hint of Townshend mysticism. The idea of fusing the band's personality into one character serves as anchor and springboard...
...actually submitted for possible review." This week Foote and Sheppard collaborated in producing a section devoted entirely to children's books; it includes an article (by Sheppard) on Maurice Sendak, who has just illustrated a collection of Grimms' fairy tales, a four-page color insert of illustrations by Arthur Rackham, N.C. Wyeth and Peter Spier, plus brief reviews of a few of the year's best juvenile books...