Word: editor
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...police force, then struggling ineffectively against a crime surge that had made Atlanta one of the homicide capitals of the U.S. But today the top cop is being cheered more than he is being jeered-even by some of his harshest early critics. Says Hal Gulliver, editorial page editor of the Atlanta Constitution, which vehemently opposed his appointment: "Eaves must be doing something right...
...world of 1976, undeniably come of age and attained a new level of élan and confidence. "I think for the first time that the attitude that the American woman has about dressing is the concept most admired and emulated in the world," says Grace Mirabella, Vogue's editor in chief. "It is because she is on to something-a certain way and kind of dressing, a demand for ease and a kind of good looks, a simplicity of looks...
Every once in a while, we like to share with our readers news of awards that TIME stories have won. Recently, there have been four such awards. The Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge presented one of its George Washington Honor Medals to Business Editor George Church for his July 14 cover story examining the question "Can Capitalism Survive?"; another medal was awarded for our special 1776 issue. Associate Editor Frederic Golden received the American Institute of Physics' science writing prize for his Sept. 1 cover on earthquakes. Our June 30 examination of crime, written by Associate Editors Jose...
...have always tried to maximize their power to the point where they would eventually achieve a one-party state." If progressive party leaders like Berlinguer are sincere, they still may not be able to deliver on their promises that their parties would observe the rules of democracy. Irving Howe, editor of the socialist quarterly Dissent, warns that in a moment of crisis "the old Stalinists and younger neo-Stalinists . . . could become a serious force pressing for an authoritarian 'solution...
...reform follows a drop-off over the past decade of 60% or more in individual confessions, once a weekly or monthly routine for the devout. Says Robert Burns, executive editor of U.S. Catholic magazine: "The church realized it had to do something-the situation was rapidly deteriorating." Among the causes: the waning of the once common belief that confession must always precede Communion, and the spread of more liberal concepts of sin. Another Catholic editor, Commonweal's John Deedy, believes the church is already "well down the road" toward elimination of individual confession. Whether those low-lit "reconciliation rooms...