Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...British have always been deeply suspicious about poetry, the decimal system, the Gulf Stream and the continent of Europe. Especially the continent of Europe." So wrote the well-known British journalist, Cassandra. Among Demarest's British colleagues on TIME'S London staff, feeling runs high and generally favorable for joining Europe. Says Correspondent Monica Dehn: "We have no option: I think that is the general feeling. As in 1939, there suddenly came a moment when we knew in our bones that war was inevitable; so there is now a feeling that the Common Market is inevitable. For myself...
...Pollak Lectures were established in 1954 by a gift of Leo Silver, in honor of the Austrian-born journalist and literary critic. They are intended to deal with some aspect of the study of government and to encourage careers in government administration and politics...
...Acts empowered the President to export any alien deemed dangerous to the country and to punish journalists for printing anything detrimental to the national interest. A journalist, John Peter Zenger, was brought to trial under the Sedition Act, but a jury found him innocent. By 1801, both laws had vanished from the federal statute book...
...leave this house," the solicitor's clerk told Mr. Biswas. "Really for my mother sake, man. That is the onliest reason why I have to move. The old queen can't man age the steps." And so Mr. Biswas, ex-sign painter, ex-bus conductor, ex-journalist, achieved his heart's desire and moved into a dwelling of his very own. It looked "like a huge and squat sentry-box," he paid too much for it, the upper floor sagged, the windows would not shut, one door would not open, but it was a house...
...lunch? No. "You have to walk for your lunch," said the 67-year-old Khrushchev as he led Salinger on a five-mile tour of the estate, meanwhile identifying, with an amateur horticulturist's pride, nearly every bush and tree along the way. "I never met a journalist who knew anything about agriculture," said Khrushchev. He showed Salinger a pond full of carp. "I guess they don't know the Chairman of the Party is here," grumbled the Party Chairman when no fish broke the surface. But at that one fat carp came...