Word: newsweekly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...news of the robbery and manhunt is filtering off into even the smallest burgs of northern New England. The police are flooded with tips on the whereabouts of the suspects. The news has now broken around the country. And in New York, a writer for Newsweek is adding adjectives to the final version of the capsulized story which will appear on the newsstands here Tuesday...
...hard to write the life story of a hero. It is even harder if you yourself are the hero. South Africa's renowned heart surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard did not entirely surmount this dilemma. In fact, it seems at times as if he or his collaborator, a onetime Newsweek correspondent in Rome, found it hard to choke self-admiration down into a deprecatory gruffness. The poor boy who made good, the youth who kept his head when all men doubted him, the Walter Mitty syndrome-all the treacherous cliches of autobiography are there. What emerges from them, however...
...Overseers are: Helen H. Gilbert '36, chairman of the Board of Trustees of Radcliffe; Louis W. Cabot '48, a Boston industrialist: Wade H. MoCree Jr., a Detroit judge: Donald Kennedy '52, a professor; and John J. Iselin '56, the former nation editor of Newsweek...
...academic freedom," Bator said. Then the Washington editor of the (London) Sunday Time, a friend of Bator and Neustadt, called Bator at 11:45 Monday night to say he had heard that at a lunch Sunday at the home of Katherine Graham (publisher of the Washington Post and Newsweek magazine), someone had alleged that the Harvard group had arrived at Kissinger's office Friday with a taperecorder...
...Among companies that volunteered advisers: TIME-LIFE, Newsweek, Psychology Today, New York, CBS, Young & Rubicam, J.K. Lasser Tax Institute, Cowles Communications, McCann-Erickson and Lorillard Corp...