Word: journals
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...them ended up at a single-story, soot-stained building on the industrial outskirts of Frankfurt, West Germany. From the presses within has come in recent years an irregular, handset journal, Grani (Facets), containing some of the major finds of contemporary Soviet letters. Among them: poems from Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago in 1956, a year before the novel appeared in the West, and a transcript of the 1966 Sinyavsky-Daniel trial. Grani also printed excerpts from the now-famous memoirs of Eugenia Ginzburg, Journey into the Whirlwind (TIME, Dec. 1, 1967), an account of life under Stalinist terror...
Wispy Smuggler. Other copies of Cancer Ward have been brought out from Russia. Several chapters turned up in a Slovak literary journal called Bratislava, which, like many East European Communist periodicals, is not heavily censored and thus provides another source for sharp-eyed Westerners. A completed copy of Cancer Ward turned up in Rome, where Publisher Alberto Mondadori in March copyrighted a Russian-language edition that he says was brought to him unsolicited. He now has an Italian edition in print and claims worldwide rights to the book. In Britain, a man purporting to represent Solzhenitsyn delivered a manuscript...
Last week, in the A.M.A. Journal, Drs. Arthur Innes, Arline Grant and Malcolm S. Beinfield of the Norwalk (Conn.) Hospital reported that they have further shortened the average postoperative hospital stays in four types of cases...
Earlier, in the journal Surgery, Dr. Paul T. Lahti told of 611 consecutive patients he sent home even more speedily from the William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., and Grace Hospital in Detroit. Of 67 appendicitis patients, only seven stayed in the hospital even as long as the average Norwalk patient. All 87 of his young single-hernia patients were sent home within two days of their operations. Of 72 gall-bladder convalescents, 59 were out in five days...
Under the editorship of senior Charles Lovell, the Journal's news sense is particularly good, increasingly ambitious. Past issues have presented a valuable account of the Watts riots, and a feature on the little-known but remarkable spread of Judaism among New York City Negroes. Epps' essay, which is from his forthcoming book on Malcolm X, was a good catch. The Journal is now soliciting contributions from every black elected official in the country, and is beginning quarterly publication. Lovell, in particular, has kept an open but skeptical journal on its feet so far. We look forward to more...