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Word: journalists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...regards Highland life as the epitome of insanitary sloth. He brings a shapely wife, who admires his Penthean principles but turns to lustier men for her Dionysian pleasures. Along with the Pettigrews have come a varied bunch of visitors, including a novelist in flight from the tax collectors, a journalist, a Greek professor, a gang of salmon poachers. And it so happens that the laird's lovely daughter chooses this moment to stage a village production of Bacchanals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Greek in the Heather | 7/28/1952 | See Source »

...building Cinecitta and granting state subsidies. But he also dictated the propaganda trash which was the industry's main prewar product. After liberation, Italy's democratic government resumed the subsidies. But Italy's able young film boss, Under Secretary of State Giulio Andreotti, 33, onetime journalist and underground fighter, wisely kept hands off the product. Result: such imaginative directors as Rossellini and Vittorio (The Bicycle Thief) De Sica had free play...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SHOW BUSINESS: Rome's New Empire | 7/14/1952 | See Source »

...wrote a sensational story for True that two former American OSS men had killed their superior officer, Major William Holohan, in 1944 in Italy, to help Communist partisans (TIME, Aug. 27). L'Unità fired back at Stern's charges against the Reds: Stern is a "false journalist" who is really acting as a spy for the U.S. State Department...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Double Beating | 7/7/1952 | See Source »

...Grenade in Each Hand. The British put her to work at once. Posing as a British journalist in Budapest, Agent Skarbek commuted by ski and car across the Tatra Mountains into Poland, to organize escape routes for Polish and Allied officers. Once she and her partner, a childhood friend named Andrew Kowerski, were captured by the Gestapo, but Christine, whose poise in the presence of danger soon became legendary, talked them both out of trouble. According to British Intelligence, she was the only woman who went through six years of Allied undercover work and throve on it. Most women gave...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Countess | 6/30/1952 | See Source »

...Italian audience. Last week the Italian government finally booted Correspondent Cecetkina out of the country. Said the Foreign Office: "[This isj no more than a legitimate measure by a government which rigorously respects the freedom of the press, but which can no longer tolerate the systematic discrediting by a journalist of a country in which she is a guest, and in which she had been living in democratic freedom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Miss Pravda, 1952 | 6/30/1952 | See Source »

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