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...biographer of John Hay, Roosevelt and Washington, will edit. Thayer, like his employer, is a Harvard man, and is generally considered to be the most "cultured" of all Hearst's men. ¶ Mr. Hearst took over the Baltimore American (morning) and the Baltimore News (evening) from Frank A. Munsey two weeks ago. The News retains its old format, but The American already bears its master's mark on every page...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Imperialism | 4/21/1923 | See Source »

...Lord Robert Cecil and a collection of New York newspaper men saw each other yesterday. The line at the head table included, sitting next to each other, Frank A. Munsey, who supplied the food, Lord Robert Cecil, Senator Beveridge of Indiana, William Randolph Hearst and Thomas W. Lamont, of J. Pierpont Morgan & Co., all most becoming and appropriate. "There was also William C. Reick, who went reporting with this writer nearly forty years ago, and Dayton, publisher of the Evening Journal, the ablest publisher with one possible and doubtful exception in the United States. There was J. A. Moore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Great Ones | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

...same reason that Miss Margery Rex could not attend the Newspaper Women's Ball, Michael Grayson of Mr. Munsey's Sun can never be a member of the Newspaper Club. There have been three " Michael Graysons" in the past four months. Mr. Hearst and Mr. Munsey are aware that contracts with ectoplasmic personalities cannot prove awkward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: At the Ball | 3/10/1923 | See Source »

...prohibition in much the manner of the adept writer of theses, but with evident thoughtfulness, which makes his work readable and often highly interesting. "The Beaver"--a character study of a most likable beaver--is well written, Mr. Strouts' "Problem of Economics" is admirable of its kind, and Mr. Munsey's translation "From the Spanish" has a quality unusual in undergraduate publications. Possibly the other prose in the number does not attain the standard set by these three, but all of it is readable, and none of it is without interest as representative undergraduate production...

Author: By K. B. Murdock ., | Title: MURDOCK PRAISES ADVOCATE | 5/9/1919 | See Source »

...impulse and moves when and where his creator would have him. "Borrowing a Smile," by Mr. Clark, save that it is more firmly constructed than the other story, has little to recommend it. The moral is hackneyed, and the subject is just such a one as would suit a Munsey "storiette." To say that it is banal and trifling is to be as severe as courtesy allows...

Author: By H. N. Hillebrand, | Title: Review of Current Advocate | 11/21/1913 | See Source »

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