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Almost overlooked in the fast weekend transit was the ostensible purpose of the Thomson junket: to celebrate the first anniversary of the Sunday Times's color supplement. This flashy bit of New World journalism had drawn only derogatory cracks and a small hello when Thomson introduced it last year to an England used to tight little Sunday papers. "Roy Thomson has taught us something new in journalism," sneered Beaverbrook: "How we may have color without advertisements or alternately advertisements with color." The first issues were an arty mishmash, and the color supplement staggered along almost exclusively on Roy Thomson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Capitalistic Invasion | 2/22/1963 | See Source »

...hold their own by pouring their advertising into neighborhood papers. Stores desperately seek new means of getting word to potential customers; for $750 a day, Manhattan's S. Klein department stores bought ad posters on subway car windows-and gladly chipped in another $2,640 to have 600 transit workers paste them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marketing & Selling: The Strike's Impact | 2/8/1963 | See Source »

...central issue raised by the newspaper strike cannot be settled by the ordinary processes of negotiation. It is the same issue that is at stake in the East and Gulf Coast dock-workers' strikes and the Philadelphia transit workers' strike: how to deal with men whose jobs are imperiled by the introduction of new machinery. The I.T.U.'s automation policy is extremely conservative; the typographers have rejected even the most reasonable management offer on technological unemployment. The publishers are willing not to fire any men to make room for advanced machinery, but to leave unfilled vacancies created by death...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Newspaper Strike | 1/23/1963 | See Source »

...liberalized Rules Committee would mean that a batch of New Frontier legislation would be waved through the House. They were certainly not very well founded. Even as expanded, the Rules Committee in the 87th Congress held up 24 bills, including Administration proposals on an urban-affairs department, a mass-transit act, broad federal aid to education, and a youth-conservation corps. More important, other priority Administration bills were either bottled up in other committees or defeated on the House floor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Escape from Emasculation? | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

...watching very closely to see that they don't move in and deprive us of tax revenue," Vellucci added. Bids for the property must be submitted to be Transit Authority before Dec. 28 Although Harvard's offer "seems to be the best deal right now," Vellucci said he might later support selling the land to another bidder if his development would pay more taxes...

Author: By Lawrence W. Feinberg, | Title: Vellucci Says Yards May Go To University | 12/15/1962 | See Source »

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