Word: newsweeklies
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Forty years ago this spring, former Harvard president James B. Conant' 14 graced the covers of both Time and Newsweek. But this is a different era, and it was jarring to see President Neil L. Rudenstine on the cover of Newsweek last week...
...BEEN A SLOW NEWSWEEK...
...Newsweek's March 6 cover featured a seemingly-bewildered President Rudenstine. The big news? "College Presidents, Coaches, Working Mothers Say They're Exhausted," Newsweek boldly proclaimed. That everyone seems to be exhausted must have come as a great surprise to the editors over there...
...Newsweek fails to pass muster on its content. At last Friday's Freshman Dance, the President looked stronger than he had for a long time. Tanned and smiling, he spent an hour meeting students and dancing elegantly through the Union. That Rudenstine is back made neither an impression on the Newsweek editors or the photographer they hired to take a picture of him last Friday. The cover photo of the president proved once again that image is not reality...
...that the United States now has but two weekly news magazines (and fading ones, at that). But it would be irresponsible to disregard the sloth and ineptitude of the Newsweek team, considering its unfamiliarity with exhaustion...