Word: journaliste
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...normal requirement for the Fellowship that the candidate be a member of the working press who can secure a leave of absence for a term of study. The new rules are solely to make it possible for those newspapermen now in war service and the occasionally self-employed journalist to be considered...
GOODBYE, PROUD WORLD-Margaret Emerson Bailey-Scribner ($3). Teacher-poetess-journalist Bailey describes with intelligent lack of sentiment her childhood in Providence and the benevolent influence of a gentle professor father and a charming, spirited mother...
Died. Hugh Byas, 70, canny Scottish journalist, Tokyo correspondent for both the London Times and the New York Times (1927-41), authoritative writer on contemporary Japan (Government By Assassination), lately Yale lecturer; after long illness; in New Haven, Conn...
Raymond Clapper, plainspeaking, widely read, plain man's columnist who was killed in a plane crash during the invasion of the Marshalls a year ago, was posthumously awarded the Purple Heart by the U.S. Navy, which cited him as a "brilliant journalist" who died in "gallant company and in a worthy cause...
...hours earlier, in a suite at the Wardman Park Hotel, tall, greying Ambassador Alberto Tarchiani had made his bow to the U.S. Just 55 hours out of Rome, via a U.S. Army transport, he had called in the U.S. press even before inspecting his embassy. "I am an old journalist myself," he said to the 21 newsmen. "I appreciate your work very much...