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...programs, as they are primly called, began to come into their own. While they cannot possibly match the concern a network lavishes on a profitable husband-and-wife comedy, they have made some impressive strides into prime evening time. Spurred equally by the guilt feelings left over from the quiz frauds and by interest in the political campaign, the networks are putting more information programs on the air than ever before. If the 1960 campaign seems to have been less fustian than others in the past, TV's exacting eye and ear deserve much of the credit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: The News That's Fit to Tape | 10/31/1960 | See Source »

THIS week the 1960 edition of TIME'S Vacation Review Quiz is being mailed to the thousands of students across the country enrolled in the TIME Education Program. A supplement to TIME'S annual Current Affairs Test, the 50-question quiz was created as an entertaining way for college and high school students to review the news. You may have a complimentary copy (and answer sheet) by writing to Vacation Review Quiz, Box 415, New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Oct. 10, 1960 | 10/10/1960 | See Source »

...these men (like Chester Bowles and John Kenneth Galbraith) helped to draft the Democratic platform, and occasionally the eloquence of their unhappiness gives the lie to the visions of mindless utopia cast by the rest of it. "We have drifted into a national mood that accepts payola and quiz scandals, tax evasion and false expense accounts. . . exploitation of sadistic violence as public entertainment," they tell us. The presence of these words in the platform implies that President Eisenhower's administration has been responsible for all these, just as Frank Church suggested in his keynote address that the Republicans had been...

Author: By Robert W. Gordon, | Title: Now the Democrats | 8/4/1960 | See Source »

...haired, with widely spaced dark-brown eyes and a serene, oval face . . . She seldom wears hats, but when she does she likes them large-brimmed and fem inine, though never fussy. If she has a fashion-signature, it is simplicity." . . . Reminding televiewers that the last echo of rigged TV quiz shows has not yet died away, a Manhattan grand jury called in onetime Quizling Elfrida von Nardroff, 34, winner of $220,500 on NBC's extinct, discredited Twenty One program, to tell what, if anything, she knew about sure-fire answers. As she left the hearing. Elfrida was asked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Aug. 1, 1960 | 8/1/1960 | See Source »

Life with Farve. Having passed or flunked a Mitford quiz along these lines, the reader may find any residual curiosity about the family amply answered in Daughters and Rebels, Jessica's sprightly chronicle. Some things should be settled first. What was Hitler's reaction to Jessica's elopement with Romilly when Unity told the Fuhrer, "My sister Decca has run away to Spain with the Reds"? Hitler sank his head in his hands. "Armes Kind!"1 (poor child), he sighed. What did Mr. Anthony Eden, the Foreign Secretary, do? He dispatched a destroyer to try to break...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Characters in Search of ... | 6/20/1960 | See Source »

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