Word: lindstrom
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...prod on almost any subject-except newspapers. Hoping to remedy the "voicelessness of the press about its own business" and its "almost psychopathic" sensitivity to criticism, the New England Society of Newspaper Editors began last week to publish an outspoken new magazine, the American Editor. Said Carl E. Lindstrom, executive editor of the Hartford Times, who is the society's president and editor of the new quarterly: "This journal is dedicated to self-examination rather than selfcriticism, but we shall not be afraid to study critically any of our habits...
...soul-searching in Editor's first issue would have seemed even more impressive in the pages of the 22 New England papers that have chipped in to start the quarterly ($1.50 a copy) now being mailed to the editors of most U.S. dailies. But it bore out Editor Lindstrom's words. Items...
...return was as brief (36 hours) as it was triumphant; she had come to pick up the New York Film Critics' "best actress" award for her excellent performance in the title role of Anastasia (TIME, Dec. 17). Not there to meet her: Ingrid's daughter Jennie Ann Lindstrom, 18, a University of Colorado freshman, unseen by her mother since 1951. Actress Bergman later chatted affectionately by long-distance phone with her daughter. Serene in a handsome mink coat, Ingrid doffed it for TV cameramen, then held tape-recorded interviews in French, Italian, Swedish and German, after which...
Looking somewhat like a younger edition of her celebrated mother, Jennie Ann (changed from Pia) Lindstrom, 17, blonde and shapely daughter of Cinemactress Ingrid Bergman, enrolled as a freshman at the University of Colorado, undecided as to whether she should specialize in English literature or take a pre-law course. Cornered by reporters, Jennie Ann, only ten when her mother left her father and ran off to Europe with Italian Director Roberto Rossellini, firmly said: "Of course I get letters from my mother, and I plan to see her again, although I can't see why people should want...
Raging passions!") and wound up pre senting little Robertino to Rossellini while still awaiting her divorce from Dr. Peter Lindstrom. In the current issue of Redbook magazine, Ingrid describes her "or deal" and defends her "selfish decision." "I've never been able to understand all the fuss. All right, I had a baby before I was married. It's not the first time that ever happened to a woman, and it's not the last . . . And if the two people love one another and marry, and if they have a happy family, isn't that what...