Word: newsweekly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
After three months, a tanned and rested Rudenstine was back, but not before Newsweek had put him on the cover with the word "Exhausted" over his face in large letters...
Unfortunately, the real world that seniors are heading out into hasn't reacted as well to the growth of the 'Net. Newsweek may have a page about cyberspace, but major publications still run pieces smugly telling Internet users to get a life. Some public figures pride themselves on knowing nothing about cyberspace. The Internet was recently slammed for its usefulness for militant militias. the backlash has begun...
...University was so ostracized after last years' election, Newsweek magazine even said that in the nation's capital, Harvard is "out," and House Speaker Newt Gingrich's West Georgia College...
...Newsweek] was working on a cover-story about exhaustion; since the president had recently taken a three-month sabbatical to recover from fatigue, its editors likely saw in Rudenstine the perfect cover-boy....In attempting to acquire an unflattering photo of Rudenstine, however, Newsweek crossed the line between good journalism and tabloid trash....Such misprepresentation gives all journalists a bad name...
...students at Harvard. Yet that is not to say that when Harvard and Radcliffe merged in the '70s, equality swept into the river Houses and eradicated years of entrenched discrimination; women still found obstacles in the classroom, in their living environments and in their extracurricular activities. One editor at Newsweek recollected during a panel on women in the media at the 1994 Women's Leadership Conference a particularly disturbing story about The Harvard Crimson in the mid-'70s: a woman was denied the presidency of the campus' daily newspaper because its top executives had decided that The Crimson was simply...