Word: formatting
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...Stone's Weekly until 1968, when the fortnightly format was forced on Stone after a heart attack and an operation that left him with distorted vision in one eye. He still writes every word of the Bi-Weekly, aided only by a woman who "helps me read the Record" and a young man who "does legwork and looks up things." His wife serves as business manager. "I love this little fleabite paper," Stone says. "I'd like to stick to 65. In December 1972, it'll be 20 years...
...guaranteed, to cut up any tutor's rump. But hopefully, your tutor and you will read it before you flush it. To incite you, the Advocate now offers provocative visual and psychic stimulation-prose, poetry, drawings and photographs from within Harvard. The Advocate 's new layout and design format was introduced to bring readers some pleasure and to attract writers to submit their work and publish in the next issue, in April. Can you really, in good conscience, turn down this offer? You shit on the Advocate now, soon you'll want to spit on a Candy Striper...
Last week's hour-long "Conversation with the President" over nationwide network television was a public relations triumph for Richard Nixon. The President was pleased with the result-and little wonder. The "conversation" format gives him a number of built-in advantages, enabling him to get to the public without being badly scarred by his questioners. Instead of an interview, it is a chance to present presidential views to an audience of 55 million...
Give and Take. Both the medium and the format impose limitations. The "conversation" label implies give-and-take among equals, an obvious impossibility in this case. "A quick-minded President," admits Sevareid, "is pretty well in the driver's seat during these transactions, no matter how they're arranged. He can give about as much as he wants to give, and take about as much as he wants to take. There is no magical method or question that will get President Nixon to say something he does not want...
Rising paper costs and an impending quantum jump in second-class postal rates are forcing shrinkage in the size of many U.S. magazines. Such LIFE-size books as Holiday and Boys Life have already been reduced to virtual TIME size. McCall's will go to the smaller format with its February issue. Last week Esquire announced that it too would shrink, starting in September...