Word: telegram
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Rudolph said the expected the materials at any time but could not be sure of any particular delivery date. Vellucci suggested sending a telegram to the Minnesota supplier, and Rudolph said he would phone the company's regional representative instead...
...afternoon newspaper, the World Journal, is April 25. The only way the date can be met, said Matt Meyer, president of the new publishing company, World Journal Tribune, Inc., is for the newspaper unions to cooperate. "In our judgment," wrote Meyer in a letter to World-Telegram employees, "the merger is the only way we can create a publishing force which will endure in New York and, at the same time, make employment available to the largest number of people who presently work for our papers." Similar letters were sent to Journal-American and Herald Tribune staffers...
...says, "and we're going to reflect it." For foreign coverage, the World Journal will rely on the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service. Like both its predecessors, the paper will depend on newsstand sales-which means large eye-catching headlines. But with the Journal and Telegram no longer vying with each other in sensationalism, Conniff hopes to make his combined paper more reflective and responsible...
...changes, including a switch to Herald Tribune body type, readers should have no trouble recognizing the old Journal-American and old World-Telegram in the new World Journal. Except for Murray Kempton and one or two others, most of the two papers' apparently inexhaustible supply of columnists will somehow find elbow room. In editorial command will be the kind of balanced ticket (Irish, Jewish, Italian) that is the delight of city politicians: Editor Frank Conniff, now Hearst national editor; Managing Editor Paul Schoenstein, now Journal-American managing editor; and Assistant Managing Editor Louis Boccardi, now World-Telegram assistant managing...
...will readers have any trouble recognizing the new Herald Tribune; it is scarcely changing. Even on Sundays, when it will combine with the Journal and be edited by a Telegram man, it will still be written largely by the present Trib crew. Last week Trib men were angered by published reports that the new corporation will give the paper a time limit to turn into a moneymaker. Denying any such stipulation in the merger, the editors complained that such rumors scare off advertisers who have been growing more friendly of late. Last year Trib advertising revenue showed an encouraging...