Word: sectionalized
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...section of TIME devoted to the press [July 19], reference was made to certain changes in the city room of the New York Times. Your article stated, among other things, that Assistant Managing Editor Turner Catledge had been moved up to acting managing editor to "replace" Edwin L. James who sailed the week before for a vacation in Europe. Some who have read this have assumed this was a permanent change instead of the normal routine of replacing the chief executive when he is on a vacation. Mr James and Mr. Catledge have been close associates for many years...
Thank you for printing, in your admirable Religion section, the New Statesman and Nation's attack on us. It is a choice example of the odd logic of so many of the assailants of our "irrelevant" doctrine and our "decaying" church. "Why should anybody go to church," asks Editor Kingsley Martin [TIME, July 19], "and listen to the Sermon on the Mount, when they know that atom bombs are being made for use?" Why, he asks, listen to the greatest compendium of moral law ever issued, in a time of singular moral lawlessness? In other words, why should anybody...
Until this week, however, we didn't have nearly enough of these new facts to give us a true-to-life portrait of the more than three million people who are reading TIME today. But now we have taken another look at you - by sending a cross-section of you a nine-page questionnaire. Because we were trying to get an over-all picture of TIME'S 1,800,000 men and 1,500,000 women readers from this large cross-section survey, we called our questionnaire About Your TIME Exposure, and the last question asked, "How about...
...Cross-Section, U.S.A. (Sat. 3:30 p.m., CBS). Farm experts discuss the question: "Are We Making the Best Use of Our Natural Resources...
...subject of running was rarely mentioned in the Patton home. Mel never read the sport pages: "I might begin believing those things they write." When the afternoon paper was delivered to their neat, $35-a-month apartment on Beverly Hills' Burton Way, his wife tore out the sport section and put it away. As sensitive to excitement as a punch-drunk fighter is to bells, Patton didn't want any gongs ringing inside...