Word: journals
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...JAMES M. SMITH, a leathery, 70-year-old cattleman was well into his second week of publishing the Arizona Journal. Phoenix has seen this masthead before. It was flown for a year by onetime Arizona Attorney General Bob Morrison, but last winter, after the U.S. Government demanded payment of some $200,000 in delinquent taxes, Morrison hauled his ensign down (TIME, Feb. 15). To run it up again, Cattleman Smith acquired the handful of assets left by the Journal-principally the empty plant, some office furniture and Bob Morrison, who still has accounts to settle with assorted creditors. Smith...
...EVAN MECHAM, 39, another Arizonan, operating largely on nerve, got into print this week with the first issue of the Phoenix Evening American. To get even this far, Mecham had to cannibalize the corpse of the Arizona Journal-by buying its offset presses right out from under Cattleman Smith's nose, and leaving Smith to scrabble for new presses...
...HANK GREENSPUN, a blustering, cantankerous sometime politician and newsman, came down from Nevada last January to pick the bones of the Arizona Journal and, failing in that mission, bought a successful shopping throwaway, the Phoenix Sun, as a kind of consolation prize. Greenspun, who also publishes the Las Vegas Sun, hopes to have his Phoenix Sun rising daily before the end of the year...
...Waltham, Mass., garbage man. "I won't quit my sanitation job until I have been named Garbage Man of the Year," he said lightly in an interview, for there had never been such a title. But at the magazine of the trade, the Refuse Removal Journal, the remark brought action: Fahey was duly informed that the magazine would begin an annual awarding of the honor by naming him the first recipient. The ex-seaman first class was thrilled. "I'm no writer," said he. "Some people call me an author or a writer, but that's only...
Last week in Philadelphia, about 13,000 "litniks," as liturgical reformers are sometimes called, gathered for the 24th annual North American Liturgical Week. There they honored Minnesota's Benedictine Father Godfrey Diekmann, 55, a pioneer promoter of liturgical reform during his 25 years as editor of the monthly journal Worship. The most compelling problem confronting the conferees was one that indicated the growing importance of liturgical reform in the Roman Catholic Church: how to educate parishes to the changes in worship that are certain to be ordered by the council...