Word: newsweek
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...more people have begun to see beyond the blinding gloss of the new ethnicity to the bottom line, reactionary impulse that lurks behind. Signs of this exposure are even now surfacing in the popular press. Side by side with its "Is America Turning Right?" cover story several weeks ago, Newsweek magazine ran a photographic "who's who" that resembled nothing if not a mug-shot line-up of the intellectual ringleaders of this drive to turn back the progressive, egalitarian tide. "There's no new right," Georgia State Sen. Julian Bond is quoted as saying directly beneath this assemblage...
...Real Paper is coming more and more to resemble the magazines it once touted itself as an alternative to, and the process is painful. Shortly after Newsweek ran its cover story on "Living Together," Cambridge's alternative weekly ran a similar piece on relationships that offered such profound insights as "It hurts as much to break up as it does to get a divorce." The only difference between the two was that the Real Paper included comments from gays...
...always said Newsweek didn't need an editorial page because its opinions are so richly blended into its news stories. That bias now seems to have reached the magazine's extremities. Newsweek's cover for the story on the Bakke case: a black and a white male playing tug of war with a diploma. Not precisely the way supporters--or opponents--of affirmative action policies view the issue...
...examine Lance's banking practices before he left the state. Nor did the national press catch on until fully four months after he became Budget Director. TIME broke the story of Lance's chaotic personal finances on May 23. Then came the Philadelphia Inquirer, New York Times, Newsweek, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Sun-Times and other publications, with disclosures about overdrafts, alleged abuses of correspondent banking relationships and other questionable practices...
...Baron Report he launched last summer, and ex-Nixon Aide Kevin Phillips says he has nearly 1,000 subscribers to his $94-a-year American Political Report. Among the latest victims of newsletter fever are magazine and book publishers: U.S. News and World Report and Newsweek have launched newsletters in the past year, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich last year paid $1.4 million for a Boston group of seven letters, and CBS and Field Enterprises are pondering new entries...