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Word: mirrored (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...years he served that paper as War correspondent on the British front. Next he worked for the Chicago Tribune as "the world's worst copyreader." Manhattan was his goal. He reached it in 1925, frittered away his money on Broadway before looking for a job. When the tabloid Mirror notified him he was hired, he stole an empty milk bottle to raise subway fare to go to work. From the vulgar Mirror Reporter Klein went to the patrician Evening Post where in the next four years his by-line became so familiar that in 1929 the American Press (trade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Buyers'Strike | 5/23/1932 | See Source »

Wood presses have been sold to the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, St. Paul Pioneer-Press, Cincinnati Times-Star, Philadelphia Bulletin, London Mail and Daily Mirror and L'Intransigeant of Paris. Mr. Wood has a great gift of tongue; publishers like to hear his Woodisms. Memorable are such as these...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Hoe Under | 5/2/1932 | See Source »

Accustomed as tabloid readers are to seeing Sunday magazine articles enriched by reproductions of classic paintings- often of Eves and Bathshebas nuder than Follies beauties-readers of last Sunday's New York Mirror magazine section blinked in bewilderment at the fertile genius of the make-up man who had coupled Painter Jean Francois Millet's famed '"Gleaners" with an article by Kathleen Norris. Substance of Author Norris' article was a complaint that employers are unfair to married women, fill jobs with unmarried women. "Idleness," pleaded the writer, ''and the lack of means of self...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Gleaners v. Employers | 4/25/1932 | See Source »

...walls of Publisher Thomason's office (in the old Market Street plant where the defunct Journal used to be published) hang pictures of Col. McCormick, his managing editor Edward S. Beck, his old time circulation wrangler Max Annenberg, now publisher of the Patterson-McCormick tabloid Detroit Mirror. Sentiment? He and McCormick were classmates in the law school of Northwestern University, law partners for many years thereafter. As a Tribune executive he was reputedly the "highest paid man in the newspaper business'-$275,000 a year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Emory v. Bertie & Click | 3/28/1932 | See Source »

Claimant to the honor of having thought of the block-aid plan was not Wilton Lloyd-Smith, but an automobile accessory dealer of Buffalo, N. Y. named David Pasternak. To Colyumist Walter Winchell of the New York Daily Mirror Mr. Pasternak last month submitted proof that he had inaugurated the idea in November 1930. Buffalo's plan gives the head of one destitute family in each block $15 per week for removing snow, sweeping sidewalks, clipping lawns. Among the 40 other cities where Block-Aid is now in practice are Albany, Rochester, Syracuse, N. Y., Pittsfield, Mass., Cleveland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Block-Aid | 3/14/1932 | See Source »

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