Word: stripping
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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When the newly formed Universal Press Syndicate of Mission, Kans., was struggling to sell to newspapers a witty but amateurishly drawn comic strip transplanted from the Yale campus daily, Philadelphia's Bulletin was among the first big papers to give the new entry a try. Seven years, a Pulitzer Prize and 400 newspaper subscribers later, Doonesbury had become one of the industry's-and the Bulletin's-hottest features. Last month Universal abruptly abandoned its old customer and, after an acrimonious court battle, gave Doonesbury to a higher bidder; archrival Philadelphia Inquirer...
Blondie is thought to be the most widely distributed comic strip, with some 1,700 clients worldwide; Jack Anderson, with about 600 clients, is probably the most popular columnist. There is no way of knowing for sure; nor will the syndicates disclose how much they charge newspapers for their wares. The fees are based on circulation; the least a small daily can pay for any feature is probably $5 a week, and the $325 a week the Bulletin (circ. 541,000) was paying for Doonesbury is probably near the top end of the scale. Any feature that does not eventually...
...becoming easier to satisfy as newspapers, prodded by antitrust actions, gradually give up the broad exclusivity they have long insisted upon. Universal, for instance, had to guarantee the Bulletin that no other paper within 100 miles of Philadelphia could run Doonesbury; switching to the more permissive Inquirer opened the strip to 26 other potential newspaper customers in the area...
...chamber is spurring a campaign to lure legitimate business back to Sunset Strip and close down porn establishments. One of its favorite techniques: to ask the city to inspect buildings for safety and zoning violations. Citizens have picketed notorious crossroads like the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Western Avenue in protest against porn, and some 160,000 people signed a petition complaining against the sex merchants. Lucille Ball and Carol Burnett narrated a slide show titled, appropriately enough, Hooray for Hollywood. The 40-member Revitalize Hollywood Committee, a community cross section of producers, actors and businessmen organized by Councilwoman Peggy...
...House last week passed the President's package of energy legislation almost unwrapped; no more than a few ribbons were torn off. The Senate is likely to act favorably on it when Congress returns next month from its August recess. Carter also signed into law the first federal strip-mining bill, which requires mining operators to restore excavated areas to their original soil condition and contours. The legislation is regarded as essential to remove the uncertainties that have prevented mining companies from making the huge investments necessary to bring about the two-thirds increase in coal production that Carter...