Word: newsweek
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...over the U.S.-Mexican border. She began her career in journalism as a reporter for the Nashville Tennessean while a senior at Vanderbilt University, then attended Harvard in 1974 and 1975 as a Nieman fellow. After four years as the Tennessean's Washington correspondent, she joined Newsday and then Newsweek. Since last April, TIME has become the fortunate recipient of her investigative skills and long experience in tracking the activities of U.S. drug enforcers. Desperados: Latin Drug Lords, U.S. Lawmen and the War America Can't Win, her book about the dark world of illegal drugs, will be published...
...slightly over 100 words a week per journalist," he wrote, explaining that the staff generates and then digests vast amounts of reporting, most of which never sees print. He then added a barbed compliment: "It is a system of literary creation like nothing else on earth, except Newsweek." Welcome to our masthead, Mr. Kinsley...
...probably not realistic to expect advances that will make the front of Newsweek," said Mayer, adding that the MGH/FACR research would probably lead to gradual improvements in the understanding of cancer...
...Skinheads in England arose in the seventies, just like the mods, the rockers, the punks," says James Miller, a lecturer in the Social Studies department and music writer for Newsweek magazine. "They achieved notoriety for attacking helpless Pakistanis...
Miller said that rumors about Bennett considering a university post started when Newsweek magazine learned that officials from the University of Tennessee last month had a conversation with Bennett "concerning what an institution of higher education might look for in a president...