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...week Cartoonist Lichty was forced to grin and bear a real-life situation as ludicrous as any he has ever drawn. At his desk alongside the city room of the San Francisco Chronicle, Lichty got the surprising news that "Grin and Bear It" was being shifted from the Chronicle (circ. 166,437) to Hearst's competing Call-Bulletin (circ. 136,572). But the Chicago Sun-Times syndicate, which owns "Grin and Bear It" and dictated the move, reckoned without Cartoonist Lichty. On the News. The cartoon, said Lichty, might be moved, but no one could move the cartoonist. With...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Grin & Draw It | 4/25/1955 | See Source »

...more jarring than a peer in jeans: the ladies and gentlemen were all clutching the Daily Worker. Deprived by the newspaper strike (TIME, April 18) of Sporting Life and all the London dailies, British racing fans were taking their tips from the columns of London's Communist daily (circ. 83,376). The paper was so in demand that on the black market it fetched 1 shilling (six times the regular price). Even Bernard Marmaduke Fitzalan-Howard, 16th Duke of Norfolk, Earl Marshal of England and a steward of the Jockey Club, bought a copy. (He held...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Coexistence on the Turf | 4/25/1955 | See Source »

...Picasso paintings is big news in the art world. Last year a solid tip that such a collection did exist was given to pretty, U.S.-born Rosamond Bernier, onetime Paris Vogue staffer and now co-editor (with her French husband) of a new, ambitious art review, L'Oeil (circ. 30,000). Address of the collection: 48 Paseo de Gracia, Barcelona. The owner: Picasso's younger sister, Maria Dolores de Vilato. Editor Bernier, who eight years ago charmed Picasso into letting her get the first pictures of his Antibes paintings, headed straight for Barcelona. The pictures of the early...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Uncle Pablo | 4/25/1955 | See Source »

...trying to settle the strike, called by maintenance and electrical workers. The 700 strikers, who earn $34.37 a week for nightwork and $29.33 for daywork, rejected a $2 wage increase from the publishers. Last week one paper settled the strike in its own shop: the Communist Daily Worker (circ. 83,376). Meanwhile, the other newspapers were losing an estimated $5.7 million a week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Strike in London (Contd.) | 4/18/1955 | See Source »

Tokyo's big, influential daily Yomiuri (circ. 2,284,902) last week headlined a series of articles on a startling economic theme: "Japan is at the mercy of the blue-eyed foreigners." The blue-eyed foreigners, cried Yomiuri, are U.S. businessmen in Japan, who are charging "exorbitant" royalty fees. Such American companies as Westinghouse, RCA and Caltex have been "very cunning" in their dealings. Concluded Yomiuri: "Japan was not defeated by General MacArthur but by General Electric...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BUSINESS ABROAD: Cold Front Over Japan | 4/11/1955 | See Source »

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