Word: mastheaded
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...them, editors of the shelved-for-the-duration Crimson, have wandered back to Plympton Street on furloughs and 60-hour passes and are now digging out the old form book and banner and masthead...
...will be noted from the afore-slung masthead, new management is come. Along with the new management is come new policy. In keeping with policy, we have revised no afore-slung column-title. Hereafter, nothing will be straight about his column but the border. We are working on that...
...they had been engraved on pieces of bread." At the start we did not have even one salaried advertising salesman, for the chances of selling enough advertising to pay his stipend seemed too slim. We called TIME "the weekly newsmagazine" on the cover and "the weekly newspaper" on the masthead. By the second issue, however, the editors had made up their minds, settled on "newsmagazine...
...well-used broom at the masthead has been symbolic of naval victory since the 17th Century, when Dutch Admiral Martin Tromp was supposed to have lashed a broom to the masthead of his flagship to signify that he had swept the British from the seas. Last week the U.S.S. Wahoo, a submarine of the Pacific Fleet, sported the symbolic broom, and none had a better right...
...column croaking fearfully against the New Deal, then charges without hesitation into another column about the peonies in a neighbor's yard. Often, and excusably, he pops with pride, says something about his 42-year-old son, William L. White, whose name is on the Gazette masthead as publisher and who, as a foreign correspondent, has written two recent smash bestsellers: They Were Expendable and Journey for Margaret But most of the time Editorialist White is translating state and national issues into rich, rolling language full of human juices. His dominant trait: fairness...