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Word: journalists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

This week it is our duty to record the death, by financial strangulation, of the daily newspaper with the second largest circulation in the U.S. No one takes pleasure in the task, but no journalist can avoid assessing what makes some papers succeed and others fail, in a day when there is such competition for a reader's attention and affection...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Oct. 25, 1963 | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

...Korean standards, the opposition, though badly divided, was remarkably uninhibited. Large crowds rallied to hear Park's chief challenger, ex-President Yun Po Sun, an archaeologist who resigned ten months after Park seized power in 1961, and ex-Premier Huh Chung, a scholarly ex-journalist. They hit out at Park's arbitrary rule and the country's economic plight, openly revived an old charge that he had once flirted with Communism.* Park accused his foes of "McCarthyism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Korea: Slim Mandate | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

...Room Nineteen is one of the bleakest stories about a woman ever written. It takes the reader over 38 blunt, brutal pages through the life-and death by gas-of Susan Rawlings. She is a career woman who has married one of her own emancipated kind -a successful journalist. Step by step, she withdraws from her husband, her children, and finally the world itself. There are no hysterics or overt scenes of disorder or despair. She simply rents a shabby hotel room and secretly goes there certain days in every week as if to meet a lover, actually...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Lady Glum About Love | 10/18/1963 | See Source »

...Geismar claims, by F.O. Matthiessen or Edmund Wilson). The American Scene is a good example of such misunderstanding and exaggeration. But Geismar only writes, this was James's most vicious book at its core, as the 'rootless returner' shall we say?--the orphan-exile from early childhood, the journalist-news paperman-artist, now kicked out, in his own fantasles, from the European castle of culture, still clung to all its familiar furnishing while everywhere. In the American scene revisted, he found only the evidence to confirm his half-discredited but still rigidly embedded dream of foreign culture, his early...

Author: By Max Byrd, | Title: 'Henry James and the Jacobites' | 10/17/1963 | See Source »

...largely ceremonial. The King's last personal armed force is being merged into the army. The King, whose cunning is legendary, may use his fortune, estimated at more than $100 million, to buy out his pro-Feisal kinsmen. The outlook was perhaps best forecast by an Arab journalist: "I see ahead a period of intrigue and suspicion, in which a passing word from a harem woman might take the sleep for nights from the eyes of important princes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Saudi Arabia: No Place Like Home | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

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