Word: tage
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...advertising is scarce, papers were fighting a cut-throat war this week for scanty circulation and advertising revenue. It was too soon to tell which papers would survive. But one small democratic newspaper, Straubing's Niederbayrische Nachrichten, had already succumbed; it was driven out by the Straubinger Tage blatt, revived by Dr. Georg Huber, who had published it under the Nazis. Hard hit by six new competitors, another licensed paper had dropped 9,000 readers. New Score. Military Government offi cials hoped that the democratic press could weather the economic war, but the battles would be bitter. The nationalists...
...Tage Bolander, Paris manager for TIME-LIFE International, publishers of our overseas editions, turned up in New York City a fortnight ago with an encouraging report of the state of TLI's operations in Western Europe. Said he, in part...
Swedish-born Tage Bolander, who spends much of his time traveling about Europe on TLI business, is concerned, of course, with TIME's Atlantic edition, printed in Paris for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. As you may recall from my February 28th Letter, Atlantic is one of TIME's four International editions whose 260,000 weekly copies go to a million readers in 180 countries and possessions overseas. Each carries advertising directed to its particular markets...
...weeks. In Stockholm's Kanslihuset (meaning Chancellery), which is aptly surrounded by weeping willows, the Prime Ministers of Sweden, Norway and Denmark met to confer on the Communist threat their countries face. Hitherto, they had carefully avoided antagonizing the Reds; last week Sweden's Social Democratic Premier Tage Erlanger said: "Communism . . . has placed itself outside the democratic community. The fight against Communism . . . will become part of the guarding of liberty and independence in Sweden...
...Locarno chill thawed into the mellow "Spirit of Locarno." A peace pact was initialed, with Benito Mussolini rushing up to sign at the last moment. Amid worldwide optimistic hopes for a New Era, too little attention was paid to what such then uncensored German papers as the famed Berliner Tage-blatt had to say: "Germany, which two years ago was isolated . . . has . . . become a factor of might once more...