Word: section
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...editors of TIME think differently. That is why we have a Press section where, week after week, we cover newsmen and the story behind the story. More fundamentally. TIME reports news about news because the press is a cornerstone of free, democratic government, and its workings a vital part of modern society...
...readers live with, are influenced by, and curious about. For example, while our political reporters were covering the politics of the 1952 political conventions, other TIME correspondents were keeping an eye out for newsworthy feats of the 3,000-man press corps (TIME, July 21, 1952). Our National Affairs section reported the first H-bomb explosion, but it was in Press that we later described the official bungling in the release of stories and pictures of the blast (TIME, April 12, 1954). Occasionally, we spot a hoax passed off as news, e.g., the widely printed story of a girl...
...putting TIME'S Press section together each week is under the direction of Senior Editor Joe Purtell and Press Editor Dick Clurman. For Clurman, the most time-consuming and necessary part of the job is reading. He reads regularly dozens of U.S. and foreign papers, plus 50 or 60 magazines each week...
...Relevant Section of the Ivy Code...
...student entering after September 1, 1953 shall be eligible whose secondary school education was subsidized or whose post-college education is promised by an institution or a group of individuals not closely related to the family at a consideration for his attending the particular institution." This section was recently reprinted by alumni magazines of the Ivy Group schools...