Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...journalist, it is such a welcome change to read again what another journalist really thinks of something or someone else...
Died. Dr. Douglas Sladen, 91, globetrotting journalist, professor, jack of many literary trades, founder of the modern British (1897) Who's Who, which he edited for three years (he is represented in the 1946 edition with a fat 66 lines, mostly listing his 50-odd books); in Hove, England...
...journalist of the closed mind . . . knows in advance which side he is on, and engages the correspondent or accepts the article that will give aid and comfort to that side. Forsaking the obligation to illuminate, he turns on the heat. The result is inevitable: the other side fights back. The blood pressure of the community rises. And what we tend to have in our journalism is not a town meeting in which unexpected opinions and fresh solutions and ingenious compromises have a hearing, but a pitched battle of propagandas. . . . A certain amount of this sort of partisan journalism...
...Journalist Robert Root recently visited Mountain House, wrote his impressions for last week's Christian Century. Excerpts...
Died. Dixie Tighe (rhymes with Zweig), 41, famed New York Post and I.N.S. foreign correspondent, one of the first newspaperwomen to go overseas in World War II, ex-wife of British Journalist C. V. R. Thompson; of cerebral hemorrhage; in Tokyo...