Search Details

Word: journals (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...JOURNAL (shown on Mondays). "A Few Castles in Spain" focuses on the current Duchess of Alba, her husband, her children and her castles. Along the way, she also mounts a defense of her notorious ancestor, the "Naked Maya" of Goya...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Jul. 7, 1967 | 7/7/1967 | See Source »

...modern public relations grew out of business' need to talk to the press and through it to the public. The first modern public relations man was the legendary Ivy Lee, a financial reporter on the New York Journal, who decided that U.S. capitalism should have help against the muckrakers, who were attacking the callous business practices prevailing around the turn of the century. He taught the railroads not to try to suppress news of accidents, as they had always done, but to win over the press by supplying full and frank detail. By ghostwriting speeches and commissioning biographies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: THE ARTS & USES OF PUBLIC RELATIONS | 7/7/1967 | See Source »

...JOURNAL (shown on Mondays). "Losing Just the Same" studies the problems of a Negro family in Oakland, Calif...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Jun. 30, 1967 | 6/30/1967 | See Source »

Although her saucy syndicated copy was still running six days a week in about 60 U.S. newspapers, Society Columnist Aileen Mehle, better known as Suzy, was as sad as a songbird with laryngitis. For two months after the demise of the World Journal Tribune, Suzy had no journalistic tree to trill from in New York, her home town and headquarters of the jet-setters whose fads and foibles she chronicles with re freshing irreverence. Last week Suzy was back home, regaling readers of the New York Daily News (circ. 2,100,000) with her tart tales. Items...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Trilling from a New Tree | 6/30/1967 | See Source »

...jokes and anecdotes"-the perfect age, in other words, for his autobiography. A Prelude is the first installment. As readers of The New Yorker found when A Prelude ran this spring, Wilson's memoirs have no narrative line, consist mainly of a string of entries from a journal he began keeping in 1914 "to catch sur le vif things that struck me as significant or interesting." Epigrams, verbal preenings, a lexicon of slang, fugitive thoughts, reading lists, poems, stories-all are spread out like so many glinting shards of experience reclaimed from the time when both...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Memoirs from Wilson Country | 6/23/1967 | See Source »

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