Search Details

Word: journalism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...JOURNAL (shown on Mondays). "The Beginnings of Life" is a study of the development of a baby from fetus through birth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Mar. 15, 1968 | 3/15/1968 | See Source »

Broadway PORTRAIT OF A QUEEN is part documentary chronicle, part dear-diary journal and part dusty political imbroglios, but mostly a record of a woman who also happened to be Queen Victoria. Dorothy Tutin wears the role like a tiara, moving from the spoiled child of power to the yielding, sensuous wife to the desolate widow with the fatigue of existence in her voice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Mar. 15, 1968 | 3/15/1968 | See Source »

Medical experts have long suspected that organs donated by cancer victims might cause danger-and possibly death -to their recipients. Still, for lack of other available transplant sources, they continued using them. Last week, writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, a kidney transplant team at Boston's Peter Bent Brigham Hospital told how cancer can be transplanted along with a donated organ. At the same time, they provided new, clear-cut evidence that cancer, like a foreign organ, can also be rejected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transplants: Casting Out Cancer | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

...Tutin, 37, whose dramatic resources are rich, varied and unspent, it is more like a tiara worn with casual ele gance. William Francis' Portrait of a Queen, which opened on Broadway last week, is not so much a play as a pastiche-part documentary chronicle, part dear-diary journal, part dusty archive of political feuds. Most attractively, it is also a touching and human record of a girl's ardor, a wife's devotion, a woman's grief...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: Portrait of a Queen | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

...Anglo-Saxon and Protestant in a time when the values of disaffected minorities are on the upswing. Cocksure's premise is that the special pleadings of minority groups-Jews, Negroes, artists, homosexuals-are funny. So Richler finds humor in the way Jacob Shalinsky, messianic editor of an obscure journal called Jewish Thought, hounds Mortimer with the wily accusation that he is really a secret Jew. And he finds rich irony in the fact that a svelte Negro beauty, who craves Mortimer's body, insists on a pay-as-you-go arrangement in order to cater to what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Minorities Are Funny | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

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