Word: readerships
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...completely "senior" book--it would have much more interest if it were angled to a year, not a class. Some copies might even be sold to undergraduates, especially freshmen, and the traditionally harassed business manager could probably squeeze out some more advertising if there was a chance that the readership would stay in Cambridge for another year or more...
...with it at her husband's stag party, which ended with everybody getting sick and some guests going to the hospital. As usual, TIME'S Medicine editor made no suggestions or recommendations about the use of antabus. He is gratified, nevertheless, at this impressive evidence of the readership his section has-right around the world...
...idea. Parton, onetime Harvard cross-country runner ('34) and wartime lieutenant colonel, had been a TIME staffer since 1935, was then Los Angeles bureau chief. He figured that combining the most successful giveaways would be one way to establish a profitable citywide newspaper with ready-made readership and advertising revenue...
...news summary of the University which for clarity and completeness is unexcelled by any Harvard publication. Sports have received their due, and more, in the hands of staffers and student correspondents. Student troubles--such as the War Memorial have brought not only news but editorial support which reaches a readership conservatively set at over 25,000. The award this fall of the Robert Sibley Prize for the best alumni magazine in America brings only deserved recognition to the efforts of editor William Bentinck-Smith '37 and his co-workers...
Most movie magazine editors wriggle feebly inside their peculiar, specialized rules. Sighed one: "Sometimes you dream of the freedom you'd have with a more intelligent readership. Lots of us are tempted to get into the comic-book field...