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Akers joined Marshall Field's Chicago Sun in 1941, and when the Sun merged with the Times in 1948, he was named managing editor. "He had a passion for perfection," says a newsman. "He just wanted a great paper in a hurry." The tabloid Sun-Times (circ. 534,000) did not become a great paper under Akers, but it did become a dedicated one; Akers encouraged depth reporting in such areas as education and religion, before most other dailies got around to it. Among his expose triumphs, he uncovered a "flower fund" in the books of a Cook County...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Editors: Watchdog in Chicago | 6/18/1965 | See Source »

Advertising Boycott. Meanwhile, there have been feeble attempts to supply Baltimore with an interim newspaper. The Guild puts out a small daily tabloid, the Baltimore Banner, for which Sun staffers scrape up news from radio and television. But local merchants, friendly to the Sun, provide little advertising and the Banner is losing more than $4,000 a week. A second daily, the New Baltimore Morning Herald, published by Johns Hopkins students' with coed assistance on weekends, has also been hard put to find advertising in a town where the Sun has long been king. But the city...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Stubbornness in Baltimore | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

While oral ballads expressed the animism and mythology of the peasantry, today's ballads can in the same way explore "the wells of mystery bricked over" in our consciousness, Lewis said. He noted America's revival of folk music, and the popularity of comic strips and tabloid newspapers, both of which are similar to ballads in technique and content...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lewis Discusses Modern Ballads | 11/5/1964 | See Source »

Both Britians and Canadians and regarded the trip with apprehension. "The Queen must not come," warned the Toronto Telegram weeks ago. In London, the Times voiced its alarm that "an innocent life is at stake," while the tabloid Daily Mirror nervously raised "the spectre of a second Dallas." Prime Minister Mike Pearson accurately described such talk as extravagant and extreme. Yet this week Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, who can normally expect a warm welcome almost anywhere in the world, begins an eight-day visit to Canada - and no one can be sure of her reception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Canada: Uncertain Welcome | 10/9/1964 | See Source »

...Change. Beginning next month, his byline will appear in the weekend edition of Newsday, the highly successful Long Island tabloid founded in 1940 by the late Alicia Patterson. The new partnership delights both sides. Captain Harry F. Guggenheim, who took charge of Newsday after his wife's death in 1963, has maintained the paper's high rank as one of the largest suburban dailies in the U.S. (present circ. 400,000). Last spring, in an effort to attract new advertisers and reader ship, he attached a Weekly Review to the Saturday paper and began a search for distinguished...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Columnists: Appointment on Long Island | 9/25/1964 | See Source »

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