Word: journalism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...many professional organizations can show a balance sheet like the American Medical Association's. Last year, as usual the A. M. A. made money. Last week the A. M. A. Journal printed the Association's annual financial report: expenditures (mostly for publishing the Journal and investigating quacks, drugs and foods)- $1,693,067; income (mostly A. M. A. dues and advertising in the Journal) -$1,755,309; net profit...
...affliction commonly called ears" the ears stand conspicuously out from the head like wings. In the American Medical Association's Journal last week Harvard's Dr. Donald W. MacCollum reported that this abnormality can be remedied by cutting a piece of cartilage fror each...
...contest: "It is anti-Catholic bias if it misleads readers on any Catholic question." Last week, announcing the prizewinners, America attributed bias to the following publications, in the following order: 1) Bergen Evening Record (Hackensack, N. J.), 2) The Apprentice (New York University undergraduate magazine), 3) Ladies' Home Journal, 4) Fact Digest, 5) Esquire, 6) Foreign Affairs, 7) the Portland, Ore. Journal, 8) Liberty, 9) the New York Times...
...series of Brotherhood Days in a dozen cities. For the first time, the committee's efforts got some enthusiastic publicity. William Randolph Hearst signed an editorial denouncing atheism, and in Manhattan, where the first Brotherhood Day mass meeting was to be held in an armory, the New York Journal and American told how, inspired by this "powerful editorial warning," Protestant, Catholic and Jewish organizations were hurrying to obtain tickets. Headlines...
...Continued to mull over the railroad problem. Virtually everyone in the U. S. from linemen on the B. & O. to the editorial staff of the Wall Street Journal had his eye on Senator Burton K. Wheeler, whose Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce has the job of drafting railroad legislation. Senator Wheeler's first move was a conference with representatives of railroad operators and workers. Ignoring the suggestion of wage cuts, the conference took up the following proposals: further RFC loans to the roads, revision of rate-making procedure, regulation of water transport, elimination of Federal barge lines, passage...