Word: journalists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...million aht Bayer invests annually in research has produced so many postwar products that 58% of its sales come from items that did not exist 15 years ago. President Kurt Hansen, 53, is a relaxed, personable sort who recalls, "A journalist once asked me why we didn't invite the press when we developed a new product. So I replied, 'Do you want to be invited every day?' " Pharmacy of the World. Since its founding 100 years ago by Dyemaker Friedrich Bayer, the company has shown a knack for seeing ahead of competitors. In the 1860s Bayer...
Capovilla told an audience in Assisi last week that after Aleksei Adzhubei had raised the question of diplomatic relations between Moscow and the Vatican, the Pope gave him a brief homily in reply. "You are a journalist," he said, "so you know the Bible and the progression of the work of Creation. You know that the Lord took six days for the work of Creation before coming to man. But as you know, the days of the Bible are not days but epochs, and the epochs of the Bible are very long...
...rules, the substance of the President's candid feelings about men and problems were often expressed in TIME without any reference to these conversations. Sidey's book is sympathetic to his subject, but not uncritical. He prefers to call it keeping the necessary middle distance of the journalist, "an outsider's view of inside the White House...
Robert Blair Kaiser studied ten years for the priesthood before becoming a journalist. Fluent in Latin, he was assigned by TIME to cover the Ecumenical Council of the Vatican in the fall of 1962, and his knowledgeable reporting won for him the 1963 Overseas Press Club award for the best magazine reporting on foreign affairs. Recently he took time off to write Pope, Council and World (Macmillan; $4.95). So that he could get the solitude he wanted, he checked in at the Roman College of an international missionary order, and there for six weeks wrote from 8 in the morning...
...even after Little Rock, progress seemed agonizingly slow. And in their disappointment, a multitude of Negroes began blaming the N.A.A.C.P. for its reliance upon the slow, stolid processes of the courts. Declared Negro Journalist Louis Lomax, 41: "The Negro masses are angry and restless, tired of prolonged legal battles that end in paper decrees. The organizations that understand this unrest and rise to lead it will survive; those that do not will perish." Asked if he thought his national leaders were asleep at the switch, Jersey City N.A.A.C.P. President Raymond Brown snapped: "Hell, they don't even know where...