Word: mail
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...CRIMSON welcomes expression of reader opinion in its Mail column. Last year over 100 letters were received, ranging from impassioned defenses of American Far Eastern policy to jibes at the prospects of a maidless college. The CRIMSON was at once called Fascist and Communist for its stand on one particular issue. Letters should be under 400 words, and the editors reserve the right to abridge them if space limitation makes this necessary. No changes in context will be made, however. Letters must be signed, but names can be withheld by request...
With the circulation and advertising gains, Brownie Reid believes that his diet for the Trib is already proving its success. Furthermore, the Herald Tribune Syndicate, which now has an alltime record total of 46 papers on its wire services and 835 mail customers, is making more money than ever before in its 31-year history. Said Reid last week: "We should stay in the black from...
...airlines underrate their strength, and points to the industry's own skyrocketing growth. In 1951 every U.S. carrier, both big and little, was on Government subsidy. Today only the smaller feeder lines and a few shaky trunk lines need a direct Government handout. Though they still earn heavy mail pay, all nine of the biggest carriers (American, Eastern, United, T.W.A., National, Northwest, Capital. Delta, Western) are self-supporting on their domestic runs. Overall estimates are that the industry will tot up a net operating profit of at least $150 million in 1955 v. $99.5 million last year...
...Alan Freed, Rock n Roll soon attracted over 20,000 people to a dance at the Cleveland Arena. When Freed moved to New York's WINS in 1954, the popularity of Rock n Roll had grown. In New York the energetic Mr. Freed disc jockeyed for WINS, answered his mail (15,000 letters a week), ran Rock n Roll Jubilee Balls in local ball parks, and encouraged 2,000 Alan Freed - Rock n Roll fan clubs...
Right-hander Kenneth Rossano '56 of Kirkland House and Hemstead, N.Y., succeeds Bill Cleary as captain of the 1956 baseball team. Rossano was elected over the summer by the mail vote of the lettermen after Cleary, who had been elected captain following the final Yale game in June, left for army service. While in uniform Cleary--the nation's leading college hockey scorer last season--will be eligible to play for the United States Olympic Hockey Team...