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We break down 100 years of history, era by era, to explore how acres of pineapple farms sprouted into one of Florida’s most ...
Winners have been announced in the William Randolph Hearst Foundation's annual National Championships.The awards are given to student journalists from across the country. They are selected from ...
Biddle was also the perfect embodiment of the nation’s monied class. He viewed “men with no property to assess and no ...
Hearst’s campaigns dangerously promoted hostility to immigrants that surged during the Depression. Secretary of Labor William Doak, delivering a ringing endorsement for the newspaper magnate’s Buy ...
The two-story palace in the sky that William Randolph Hearst, the larger-than-life media mogul who inspired “Citizen Kane,” built for his mistress is on sale. The $26 million listing marks the ...
6. The Role of Newspaper Rivalries: Pulitzer vs. Hearst The rivalry between major newspaper magnates Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst was a driving force in the early success of comic ...
Max und Moritz had been popular in their homeland for more than 30 years before the Americanized version first appeared in William Randolph Hearst’s New York Journal Sunday supplement. While touring ...
In this vein, the cartoon “We’re Just Crazy About Fascism,” circa 1940, depicts isolationist politicians and celebrities — including William Randolph Hearst, Charles Lindbergh and Ezra Pound — singing ...
The works in “William Gropper: Artist of the People,” a sharply political survey of the left-wing painter and illustrator, come in three modes and two sizes. The cartoons and lithographs in ...
The comic strip arena was quite competitive, and McCay was lured to William Randolph Hearst’s New York American in 1911. McCay was also a born showman.
To William Randolph Hearst, publisher extraordinary, retired politician, the Brooklyn, N. Y., Daily Eagle (Independent), popped these questions: "Whom will you support for President and what ...
Paul L. Harrison, of the Department of Journalism, University of Kansas, wrote a letter to William Randolph Hearst, asked a question: “How do you distinguish between legitimate publicity and ...