Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Your article is the first appropriate rejoinder to the advocacy of "preventive war" and heated belligerency ever published in a journal of notable circulation since the establishment of the United Nations ten years ago. It should also serve to defeat the purposes of those twisted personalities who would have us engage at the earliest opportunity the forces of destruction for the stabilizing of social and economic conditions on a global scale. The significance of your evaluation of America's air defenses at home, coupled with your excellent report of Great Britain's air strength, cannot fail...
...daily newspapers, few are faster growing or more prosperous than those in the Knight chain. Since taking over the Akron Beacon Journal in 1933, John S. (Jack) Knight, 60, along with his brother James, 45, have bought papers in Miami, Chicago and Detroit, built them into the nation's third biggest chain (behind Hearst and Scripps-Howard), with a combined circulation of 1,389,766. Last week the Knights added a fifth link: the 84-year-old Charlotte, N.C. Observer, one of the South's biggest and richest newspapers. Price: about...
...Army-Navy-Air Force Journal, an unofficial service publication, reported last week, however, that General Matthew B. Ridgway, Chief of Staff, was very disturbed over any reported cut in ground forces...
Everyone knows of India's Jawaharlal Nehru and of Madame Pandit, his handsome sister. Few know, however, of "the other Nehru sister," comely Krishna Nehru Hutheesing, who is 17 years younger than Jawaharlal, seven years younger than Madame Pandit. In the January Ladies' Home Journal, Mrs. Hutheesing has produced a charming portrait of herself and her distinguished family. But she is also clear-eyed about what power has done to her brother...
...Hippocratic oath, which bids a doctor hold as "holy secrets" anything that he learns in his practice, is not binding when disclosure might prevent harm or danger' to others, wrote Surgeon Edward Clifton Dawson in the British Medical Journal. A big majority of polled doctors and laymen agreed that if a railroad engineer suffers from epilepsy but refuses to tell his employers, the doctor should do so. The margin was much narrower in favor of his telling the police the name of an abortionist that he had learned from a patient...