Word: journalists
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Kennedy legend and the Johnson performance is even more dramatic abroad than at home. Johnson is regularly described by foreign left-wingers as a "man of blood" or a "cowboy murderer" or a "Texas assassin," who has "turned Viet Nam into a slaughterhouse." A middle-reading Athens journalist accuses Johnson of "blatant Goldwaterism." When it is pointed out that, had he lived, Kennedy would have had to make many of the same moves as Johnson, most foreign critics insist that he would have handled them differently, with more finesse. They concede that Johnson is brilliant in domestic affairs, though they...
...most spectacular journalist in an era of spectacular journalists. He dressed like a dandy and collected famous friends the way a connoisseur collects old masters. He was an addicted gambler who once won $470,000 in a Palm Beach poker game with...
...suggests that the child may be a figment of her mother's tortured imagination. With or without a daughter Carol has come to England to live with her brother, Keir Dullea, but he too seems rather vague for a lad who is described as a high-ranking magazine journalist...
...people who make the news are usually the people who have made the scene-the big names at home in the headlines. But to the journalist, the world's cast of characters includes many names that may be of great importance in their own fields while relatively little known outside them. These people, too, shape and shake events, sometimes even more significantly than the more celebrated personages-and any issue of TIME will prove...
...Kenya Attwood. "Their reports are so good," says a member of the Policy Planning Council, "that people in the State Department look forward to reading them, and pass their cables around. As you would expect, their reports get action commensurate with the attention they get." Attwood, a longtime professional journalist, was recently asked to write, for distribution within the department, a memo on how to write. "The best incentive for drafting a readable report," it said, "is to assume that your readers are not terribly interested in what you have to say, and that you have to tell your story...