Word: randolphs
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...noted with keen interest your item in the Press section of the Feb. 17 issue-"Often sued for libel, Publisher William Randolph Hearst has never sued in return." Is there not an error here? In 1911 Hearst filed a $500,000 libel suit against Collier...
Died. William Read Randolph, 20, tall, blond sophomore at St. Mary's University (Texas), son of the late Captain William M. Randolph for whom U. S. Army Randolph Field was named; of injuries received when the plane he was piloting on a St. Mary's Flying Club breakfast flight crashed in heavy mist at Boerne...
Hearst Consolidated was formed in 1930 to supply big-spending William Randolph Hearst with more cash. It was sold to the public mainly by advertisements in Hearst publications. Combining twelve of the best Hearstpapers and the lucrative American Weekly, Hearst Consolidated easily earned the $1.75 annual Class A dividend through 1937. In 1938 the recession cut its profits to almost nothing. But the Class A has a catch clause: failure to pay four consecutive dividends puts control in the hands of the 1,930,086 outstanding shares. Hence, Hearst management turns cartwheels to pay at least one 45? dividend...
...William Randolph Hearst's fabulous collection of art treasures is being...
Based on the late, great Western Novelist Zane Grey's last story, Western Union bears the sterling hallmark of sagebrush romance. When Outlaw Vance Shaw (Randolph Scott), riding hard to escape a sheriff's posse, stumbles on an injured man, against his better judgment he risks capture by helping the man in to the nearest stagecoach station, then rides off into the night. The man is Engineer Edward Creighton (Dean Jagger), surveying the country west of Omaha for Western Union's next push toward the Pacific...