Word: masthead
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...glad to say that Ralph has recovered from his tour, is now hard at work again in Mexico and listed on TIME'S masthead as the newest addition to our roster of full-time foreign correspondents...
Blot looked back at the galleys of the story, wondered if Neihbur was the right spelling, didn't know, decided to leave it. As he thumbed through the galleys, he noticed N. Pettit's name upside-down on the masthead, thought it would be a good gag to leave...
Aside from its mere excellence, The Paris Review's main attraction for the Harvard audience will be its air of being a literary Alumni Bulletin, for its masthead is sprinkled with names that of late graced the Advocate, the 'Poon, and (caveat emptor!), the Yale Daily News. Its editor and chief backer, George A. Plimpton, headed the Lampoon four years ago, its managing editor, Thomas Guinzburg, held the same position at the Yalie Daily in 1950, while Peter Matthiessen, the fiction editor, recently taught creative writing in New Haven. Harold Humes and Thomas Spang of the business staff are local...
...intervening years may have obscured the details of the system as it then existed, but I think that this was about the way the CRIMSON was run in those earlier days. Anyway, I remember that we editors were very proud indeed to have our names on the masthead of so distinguished a journal as the Harvard CRIMSON. Joseph C. Grew '02 (State Department, 1904-1942, Ambassador to Japan...
...nightly "Battle of the Bilge." It was he who took over when the green undergraduates left off in 1934 and he who saved the day for the Crime again during World War II. Few remember that his name was put at the top of the masthead as President one issue in 1935, but no Crimed will ever forget Art. If it's anyone's paper...