Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Professor Holmes has been collating illegitimacy statistics for years, commenting on their trend. In the November 1936 issue of Population, a British journal, he declared: "There is no escape from the conclusion that larger and larger proportions of our population are coming to be of illegitimate origin." Causes for the increase, according to Professor Holmes: "Too much reliance . . . placed upon the efficacy of the contraceptive methods commonly employed. . . . Depression which has checked marriages and resulted in a certain amount of demoralization. . . . A change of sentiment in, regard to the stigma-attached to illegitimate origin...
...steel companies to join the cartel or at least to stop undercutting its prices abroad (TIME, Feb. 14). Last week no one in authority would yet admit that anything had happened, but the Earl's speedy departure indicated that an understanding had been reached. Only Manhattan's Journal of Commerce ventured to outline this understanding...
...virus of infantile paralysis. Last year, at Valhalla, N. Y., Dr. Gilbert Julias Dalldorf and associates* tried to inoculate monkeys with strains of both diseases at the same time and found that monkeys will not catch infantile paralysis while suffering from distemper. Last fortnight the Rockefeller Institute's Journal of Experimental Medicine presented the details of the experiments, as well as the scientists' explanation for the mutual exclusiveness of these diseases...
...Syndicate, which distributes Winchell's work, spent two days thinking about it, then flatly rejected Miss Hellman's guest column. Hearst editors condemned her account as Loyalist propaganda and brushed aside Host Winchell's stubborn defense of his guest. Two days later the Hearst New York Journal and American favored ex-Japanese Ambassador W. Cameron Forbes with a big headline: "EX-ENVOY FORBES HAILS FRANCO RULE-People Happy and Have Plenty in Nationalist Spain, He Says...
...executive, hired many an outsider, lopped off Field's wholesale 'business and put the company-back into the black. Last November he suddenly died. Last week, having waited for official confirmation of many rumors that Field's was purging the McKinsey policies and people, the Chicago Journal of Commerce headlined the Margeson resignation announcement FIELD'S TO MAKE SWEEPING CHANGES IN MCKINSEY POLICIES, put it on the front page. Pressagent Schaeffer, horribly embarrassed, hurriedly denied that Chicago's biggest department store would make any such changes. He said that Mr. Margeson, bitter about being forced...