Word: paged
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Though they would scorn to admit that Mr. O'Hara & associates had them frightened, the Journal and Bulletin by last week had done plenty to fend off the News-Tribune and the Star in a circulation war. Outstanding preparations included amplifying personnel, buying another page of comics for the Bulletin and Hearst International News Service and Universal Service to supplement the A. P.. United Press, and North American Newspaper Alliance Services on both sheets...
...general contemplations. His theory of the significance of Time and the possibilities of immortality, his pipe-dream of a pseudo-socialistic Utopia, his defense of the arts, all arouse us to thoughts which perhaps had never before crossed our mind. We find ourselves constantly looking away from the printed page, staring into space to work out in our own mind the meaning and value of his words. And, strangely enough, we are more than half the time in agreement with...
...place of the full-page photographs of familiar University scenes that have been included in the Album for many years, Neil G. Melone '37, Chairman of the Album Board, announced yesterday that this year's book, to be published May 15, will feature etchings and pencil sketches of the buildings and views about the college...
...throat price competition in the nation's No. 1 buying State.* Second day after the Albany flip-flop mammoth Macy's which traditionally "will not be undersold," announced what the world's biggest department store was going to do about it. Full-page newspaper advertisements screamed: "The Consumer will NOW decide." Macy's said it would henceforth offer goods in three classifications plainly labeled and described as 1) merchandise on which the price is fixed, 2) merchandise on which the price is not fixed, 3) merchandise marked "Macy's Own-Why Pay More...
Dismissed in two pages of text and a few tabulations were the commercial results of 1936. The company made $6,510,000, as against $3,500,000 in 1935, which was its worst year since 1924. For the rest of his 68-page report Mr. Babst confined himself largely to a heavily-documented squawk about the Government's sugar policy...