Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...questions that all of the world wanted to know after Khrushchev's retreat-Why did he do it? What happens to him now? Will he start something else?-occurred to most journalists, and are questions easier to pose than to answer. The full truth will be a long time emerging, but a journalist cannot evade attempting a present assessment. The answers involve both the unknowable and the imponderable, and do not lend themselves easily to resonant assurances so dear to commentators...
...wide-ranging and lively curiosity in many areas, which made him the able journalist he was, and a humane and witty response to life that made him a colleague and friend many of us will sorely miss...
Before the riot ended, 20 were injured and 45 arrested. Streets were littered with thousands of dead baby chicks. They were a grisly Flemish taunt at the Walloons, whose symbol is a rooster. Said one journalist: "Nowadays we're supposed to get along with the French, we're supposed to love the Germans, and of course we are expected to embrace the British. All this unity is a strain. Every now and then, you have to let off steam with a little old-fashioned tribal enmity...
Married. John Randolph Hearst Jr., 28, whilom journalist and grandson of William Randolph Hearst; and Patricia Lusk Tenny, 23, onetime Hearst magazine trainee; in Manhattan...
...Retreads. A collection of old stars are either returning to TV after absences or beginning completely new shows. The Lloyd Bridges Show (CBS) has come out of the sea to recast Aquanut Bridges as a journalist who dreams himself into the stories he is researching. Doing a Civil War story, for example, he closes his eyes and reappears behind a rail and post fence, blazing away for the Southern cause. The story he tells-about a temporary cease-fire arranged between men close enough to talk across the lines-is both fresh and moving...