Word: journals
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...almost too faint to be seen. Painted gods and goddesses emerged from lumps of clay, and scraps of charcoal-like material turned out to be the remnants of food that the ancient people ate, pieces from clothes they wore. By putting the pieces together, Mellaart reports in the latest journal of the British Institute of Archaeology, at Ankara, what he has learned about how people worked and played and worshiped at Çatal Hiiytik 80 centuries...
Keats and Shelley were Miss Steele's particular interests, and her studies of them were widely recognized. For a dozen years prior to her death, she was one of the directors of the Keats-Shelley Association of America and chairman of the editorial board of the "Keats-Shelley Journal...
...Somersaults. The American Medical Association takes a tolerant position on newspaper medical practice perhaps because Morris Fishbein, longtime editor of the A.M.A Journal (1924-49), wrote a column himself for 27 years. Fishbein's column, as a matter of fact, survived his newspaper career; after he left it, the syndicate kept it going with three other physicians...
...widower-poet is haunted by the conviction that his late wife never thought he loved her and that he probably didn't. One of her journal entries unearthed by Richard's editor strikingly reveals the contrary, and with this security clearance as a love risk, the poet feels free to wed his blonde disciple...
...journal entry is the fulcrum of the play, and it intervenes like a deux-ex-Olivetti, imposing an arbitrary happy ending without being psychologically convincing. Like most writers, poor Richard may have been an edgy, self-absorbed husband, but two people who live together for any length of time read each other, without needing the assurance of posthumous journals. Jean Kerr knows this and says as much when she has a character remark that the present generation thinks love "isn't real unless we have a fever...