Word: mcnaught
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Confronted by newshawks, Columnist McIntyre reiterated his fondness for "Chris'" but, as for quoting without credit, "If it did happen it happened unintentionally." Mr. McIntyre's syndicate (McNaught) was more articulate. Said Editor Charles Driscoll...
...correspondents, had negotiated the same sort of deal?Arthur Sinnot of the Newark News, Robert Choate of the Boston Herald, Roy Roberts of the Kansas City Star. Then for the first time the Sun agreed to full syndication of the column, yielding Pundit Kent considerable extra income. Last week McNaught Syndicate had signed contracts with 42 newspapers without trying, expected to double the list within six weeks...
...therefrom last fortnight was explained on the grounds that he was to serve the New Deal by editing a weekly magazine to be financed by the other three (TIME, Sept. 4). The practical brains of the group seemed to be a fifth figure, Board Chairman Virgil Vercingetorix McNitt of McNaught (McNitt) newspaper syndicate, onetime publisher of defunct McNaught's Magazine (like Plain Talk). But Mr. McNitt has been headed toward retirement lately, so last week when Messrs. Astor, Harriman & Moley announced further details about their weekly, observers concluded that if it did nothing else the subsidy would afford employment...
...could be expounded and illustrated to the masses. Both Mr. & Mrs. Roosevelt wrote for the gum-chewing Macfadden Press. After inauguration the Roosevelt secretariat was encouraged to talk by radio and write for publication. Professor Moley was most prolific, turning out a "State of the Nation" colyum for the McNaught syndicate, less readable but more helpful than Democrat Al Smith's monthly pieces in the New Outlook. In elaborating their plans last week, Backers Astor & Harriman did not say just what Editor Moley's contribution to their organ would be, but they gave these details...
...opportunely announcing plans for a 5? political weekly (as yet unnamed) and making the outgoing Assistant Secretary of State its editor. Other sponsors of the magazine were Mrs. Mary Harriman Rumsey, NRA Consumer Board chief, her brother William Averell Harriman, Union Pacific board chairman, and Virgil V. McNitt of McNaught Syndicate who was to be executive editor. The weekly will support and expound the New Deal's politics and economics "in plain square-toed English,'"' according to Publisher Astor who said he and Dr. Moley had been concocting the magazine for months. Each week since June...