Word: mastheaded
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Then, last October, Garner Ted was suddenly relieved of duties as executive vice president of the church and vice chancellor of Ambassador College. Later his name was expunged from the masthead of The Plain Truth. His radio programs were replaced by ten-year-old tapes made by his father...
THOUGH it lacks something in literary style and narrative flow, the masthead appearing on this page does have an audience; Playwright William Saroyan even had a character in his comedy Love's Old Sweet Song recite it while trying to sell a subscription. Over the years, one name in particular has drawn inquiries, like the letter from a Wisconsin reader who wrote: "I'd sure like to see your cable desk people, including that fine ink-in-the-veins pro, Minnie Magazine. Come on now, this isn't really one of your gang...
About two-thirds of the contributors to this double-edition of the Advocate are Harvard students; almost all the contributors are local talent. It is an abrupt departure from the more common Advocate practice of importing names to the table of contents from out of state--or from masthead. The artistic format has been changing too; no longer depending on a staid layout, the editors are exploring the potentials of graphics. If the Advocate's innovations can stimulate better contributors as well as more contributions, it may find itself rivalling, for the first time, its old reputation...
Last month the G.O.P.'s liberal Ripon Society pointed out that Lofton was on the masthead of New Guard, a newsletter that has been highly critical of certain Nixon policies. Lofton admits that the young New Guard conservatives are his friends, but has requested that his name be dropped from the masthead. He cites a letter from ten G.O.P. House members praising Monday as proof of his party loyalty. And he rips off Ripon: "I have my hands so full with the Democrats that I don't have time to respond to those so-called Republicans." The Democrats...
...industrial photography. Where others saw only grime, Bourke-White saw beauty; her camera could find drama and action in a factory. All the major pictures in FORTUNE'S first issue were by Bourke-White, and she was one of the four photographers on LIFE'S original masthead (the others: Alfred Eisenstaedt, Peter Stackpole, Tom McAvoy). She remained there until her retirement...