Word: monitoring
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...mischievous friends sent me his free copy of your Jan. 10 issue. He apparently was amused that you did not recognize the Christian Science Monitor as a daily newspaper...
...Christian Science Monitor reported last week that Nixon's irrepressible competitive spirit is forcing him closer and closer to declaring his availability. This is hardly a surprise, especially since President Kennedy's death has enhanced the chances of a northern moderate to win both the Republican nomination and the election. The Monitor also offered the somewhat dubious reason that Nixon would be the only other candidate acceptable to the Goldwater forces, those diminished but still significant legions...
...have shown such consistency of choice as to support the suspicion that the publishers have been picking papers mostly from habit. Over a span of ten years (1952-62), twelve names sufficed to fill all three lists. And by most journalistic standards, the invariable third choice, the Christian Science Monitor, cannot properly be considered a daily newspaper. The Monitor's editorial policy is subject to the precepts of the Church of Christ, Scientist, which owns it. Nor does the paper bother to pay much respect to the despotic deadlines that rule the rest of the daily press...
Caricaturist Kelen came to the U.S. in 1938 with his partner Derso. In former years the pair appeared in the old New York World, the Christian Science Monitor and other publications; Kelen still draws for a number of European papers. He and Derso have published a number of sketchbooks, including one on the 1945 conference that gave birth to the U.N. at the San Francisco Opera House; Harry Truman was portrayed as Lohengrin (see cut). In 1957 Kelen retired after nine years as television director of the United Nations, a post that hardly taxed the graphic powers he had trained...
...Christian Science Monitor, however, reported that "a small group of men and one or two women" did manage to push through the pickets...