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

...JOURNAL (shown on Mondays). "No Harvest for the Reaper" graphically documents the exploitation of migrant workers on Long Island potato farms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Feb. 2, 1968 | 2/2/1968 | See Source »

Evgeny Evtushenlco, 34, is dropping salt in the samovar again with yet another batch of soul-scraping poems published in the Russian journal Znamya. The poems derive from his six-week tour of the U.S. in 1966, and one in particular-Monologue of a Blue Fox on an Alaskan Animal Farm-seems an especially bold statement of the rebel's own schizoid loyalties. The fox shrills for freedom from its cage, where it is held because of the value of its fur. Then it discovers that the door to its pen has been left open, only to make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jan. 26, 1968 | 1/26/1968 | See Source »

With a projected circulation of over 400,000, the News feels, its paper could be printed at 20% less cost than the short-lived World Journal Tribune. The News has faster, more modern presses than the WJT and is more centrally located in Manhattan. The city's big retailers, however, are remarkably slow to advertise in any untried medium; many are happy enough with the morning New York Times, the afternoon Post and the surrounding suburban papers. Running, on the average, some 30 pages fatter since the demise of the WJT, the Post feels more impregnable than ever. Despite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Signs of Life in New York | 1/19/1968 | See Source »

...Starting in February, however, New York will get a new Sunday paper, the Knickerbocker News. Put out by the publishers of Funk & Wagnall's Dictionary, it will contain many of the columnists, comics and features that used to appear in the World Journal Tribune but now have no New York outlet, although they are carried by out-of-town papers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Signs of Life in New York | 1/19/1968 | See Source »

News of the secret-and never-used -pact was broken, improbably enough, by the University of Michigan's campus newspaper, the Michigan Daily. Its editor, Senior Roger Rapoport, who had worked in the Wall Street Journal's Detroit bureau last summer, ran a seven-page draft of a mutual-aid agreement that had been prepared last July -two months before expiration of the Big Three's contracts with the United Auto Workers-by General Motors' cost-analysis department...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Autos: The Pact That Might Have Been | 1/19/1968 | See Source »

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