Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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NICHOLAS AND ALEXANDRA, by Robert K. Massie. With impassive clarity, Freelance Journalist Massie details the tragedy of the last of the Romanovs, Czar Nicholas II and his wife, two innocents in a disintegrating toy world...
...bill, Dodd charged Guns & Ammo Publisher Thomas Siatos with "maliciously misrepresenting" the bill. Siatos replied that he was merely "editorializing." Nonetheless, the gun magazines feel aggrieved at their treatment by some of the press. The American Rifleman plans to establish a $3,000 scholarship for some young journalist who will document the press distortions on the subject of guns...
...London journalist, Williams writes as if he knows London. If so, those in search of a really swinging scene might just as well cancel that BOAC flight and book seats instead for Katmandu-or even Kansas City...
Hard Luck. Massie, a Rhodes scholar and freelance journalist, will probably distress academic historians by his abstention from heavy ideological expositions-and by his brisk prose. His plain thesis is that the murder of Nicholas and Alexandra put the seal of irrevocability on the Bolsheviks' successful putsch against the infant Kerensky government. Both events are traced more to Nicholas' hard luck than to any concatenation of inevitable historical forces-a Marxist theory that 50 years of propaganda have almost conned the West into accepting...
Died. Claude A. Barnett, 77, Negro journalist, who in 1919 started the Chicago-based Associated Negro Press, a news service for community weeklies (225 at the high point in 1935), until his retirement in 1963 campaigned tirelessly for civil rights and chronicled the emergence of Africa's peoples; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Chicago...