Word: journalistically
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Pelikan has just completed 50 years' teaching history primarily at Yale, and commands the respect of both Catholic and Protestant scholars. As a Lutheran, however, he enjoys a certain emotional distance from his material. Cunneen, a retired English professor and a religious journalist, delves into Marian history with less authority but with the once-burned affection of a woman who, rummaging recently through a drawer, was moved to discover her old rosary. Cunneen qualifies as a Catholic feminist: she is painfully aware of the line that runs between Saint Athanasius' 4th century contention that Mary "remained continually at home, living...
Secretary of the Treasury Robert Rubin will speak on American economic policy, and a roundhouse discussion by Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel (a communitarian) and journalist George F. Will (a conservative) will close tomorrow's events...
Mensure Yuksel Erdohan is one such prisoner, Sewall said. A female journalist, Erdohan was imprisoned in December 1995 on charges that the Kurdish newspaper for which she worked was an illegal organization...
Words, once released into print, can change people's thoughts and opinions forever, and they can never be taken back. Journalism is powerful because it has the potential to be dangerous, and one of the most critical sensitivities a journalist can have is an awareness of that horrifying potential. No media fair can adequately prepare us for that danger. But as one who tried her best to pick up the feathers, I have to tell you to be careful, and always, always, watch what...
...surprise that a courageous journalist for the San Jose Mercury-News should find that the CIA imported drugs and directed those shipments toward poor inner-city neighborhoods. It corresponds nicely with what I just described. --Gary Sudborough