Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Helmsing had urged the paper to drop the word Catholic from its title; the editorial pointed out that the N.C.R. had been conceived as a journal that was within the church but not an official part of it. "We intend to go on being a Catholic paper," wrote Hoyt, "concerned with Catholic activities, values and ideas. We do not consider ourselves to have been severed from the community...
Having learned entirely independently that Mr. Kopkind was about to publish an attack on the Institute's Director, Professor Richard Neustadt, in an American journal, I called Mr. Kopkind to ask him when the attack was to appear. We discussed the question of why he hadn't told me about it when I first called him to invite him, he suggested that maybe it would be better if he didn't come up. I told him that without having read his attack I didn't know if the whole affair would be embarrassing all around but that I imagined that...
Harvard has named the committee to select the newsmen who will come here next year as Neiman Fellows. They are Chicago Daily News Editor Roy M. Fisher, Milwaukee Journal Associate Editor Paul Ringler, member of the Board of Overseers and Boston Globe Publisher Davis Taylor, astronomy Professor and Master of Adams House William Liller '48, Harvard News Officer William M. Pinkerton, and Nieman Foundation Curator Dwight E. Sargent...
This edition of the CRIMSON was prepared by the 1968-69 Nieman Fellows in Journalism. The Managing Editor was J. Anthony Lukas '55 of The New York Times. City Editor, Lawrence Allison of The Long Beach Independent, Press-Telegram. Editorial Page Editor, Jonathan Yardley of the Greensboro (N.C.) Daily News. Sports Editor, Paul Hemphill of The Atlanta Journal. Staff Reporters and Cheerleaders: Henry Bradsher of the Moscow Bureau of the Associated Press; Paul Houston of The Los Angeles Times; Robert Levey of The Boston Globe; Richard Long-worth of the Moscow Bureau of United Press International; Michael McGrady of Newsday...
...Wallace message, in summary, was disconnected. He and the General sounded vaguely sensible and doughty as they chastized the two major parties and congratulated themselves on their grass roots support. Wallace was best reading from the Wall Street Journal with a sly smile, worst reeling off preposterous promises that farm prices would double with the country under his command...