Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Last year in rain-drenched Harvard Stadium the Crimson scored a 26-0 victory. Readers of this journal will remember the extreme discomfort the inclemency visited upon the spectators, but Harvard's players scored three times in the first quarter before relaxing...
After Hearst's a.m. New York Mirror sank without a burble, most of the columnists swam over to Hearst's p.m. Journal-American. But there was a bit of a problem for Society Snippet Suzy (Mrs. Aileen Mehle). The J-A already had Cholly Knickerbocker, and there are just so many tales one paper can tattle. Solution: Cholly walks the plank, Suzy gets full command of the society poop deck, and this week starts a combined column under the new nom de guerre of Suzy Knickerbocker...
...hope of attracting a few strays, newspapers all over the neighborhood boosted their press runs. The Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger rolled an extra 50,000 Sunday copies and sold 20,000. Hearst's evening Manhattan paper, the Journal-American, claimed a gain of 75,000 daily. The New York Times got a 25,000 boost both daily and Sunday. But Vice President Ivan Veit said that the Times's serialization of the Eisenhower memoirs probably accounted for most of that. New York Herald Tribune President Walter Thayer reported a modest circulation rise, but decided not to give...
Pettigrew predicted that Boston Negroes would join effective nation-wide boycotts of companies with discriminatory employment practices. According to Pettigrew white resistance to integration is strongest in the lower-middle class, "the most reactionary segment of the population on any topic," and among "the Wall Street Journal crowd...
...characters at Tower, Tilney & Webb, from Senior Partner Clitus Tilney down to the most recent ex-editor of the Yale Law Journal, regard it as the summit of human felicity to be senior partner of Tower, Tilney & Webb. All the behavior of all the characters, even to their manner of dress and the way their hair grows (thick for the comers, sparse, long, oily or fluffy for the outsiders and no-hopers), centers on this notion. Their private life is spent among other lawyers and their wives. They move by the tropisms of power and fear in a world...