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WHEN we decided months ago to do a comprehensive story on the New Genetics, we realized that the subject did not fit into the normal format of a cover article done by a single department of TIME. Writers and correspondents in Science, Medicine and Religion were proposing separate projects; Behavior had become a significant part of the field as well. Hence, this week's special section represents a collaboration among the four sections. Senior Editor Leon Jaroff (Atom No. 1 in the journalistic molecule) headed the task force. Science Writer Frederic Golden (2), drawing on material gathered by John...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Apr. 19, 1971 | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

Harvard has not played up to its capacity in previous Ivy Tournaments, and the format of tourney games is slightly irregular. Instead of the normal 40-minute halves, squads play only 25-minute periods, but compete three times in two days. This encourages a fast start and then sitting on the lead, which is not the Crimson style...

Author: By Dave Koplow, | Title: Ruggers Open Spring Competition | 4/16/1971 | See Source »

...Relevance. The networks' replacement shows, at least on paper, do not presage any major format breakthroughs for next season. The straitened conditions in the movie business have made a few top-rank stars available to TV for the first time and have forced a few old favorites to return. James Stewart will make his series debut as a college professor in an NBC situation comedy. ABC has landed Shirley MacLaine for a sitcom in which she is a roving photojournalist, Tony Curtis as a jet-set adventurer in an action series and Anthony Quinn as a Mexican-American mayor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The Losers Are ... | 3/29/1971 | See Source »

Whatever the origin of a story idea, when it reaches print in the Monthly it bears the Peters imprint: well-documented, straightforward, calm-and tough. As his fellow muckraker I.F. Stone comments: "It's a responsible magazine. It doesn't go in for half-assed hysterics." The format fits the approach: the Monthly is about the size of National Geographic but as deliberately subdued in appearance as the Geographic is eye-catching. The magazine's staff of six is talented and young; its co-managing editors, Taylor Branch and John Rothchild, are in their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Low-Keyed Muckrakers | 3/29/1971 | See Source »

This is what constitutes the true danger of Landau's piece. Take the mistakes and failings of some PL members and supporters and present them in a distorted, incomplete format that plays heavily on an anti-Communist stereo type that is as much a part of us all as racism or male chauvinism, and what you've got is a red baiting smear of an organization that has consistently fought militantly in support of just struggles, even those of groups with which it deeply disagreed (e.g. Chavez Lettuce Boycott, NAC's campaign of last spring against the CFIA...

Author: By Tom Antenucci, | Title: The Mail: SDS Replies to Landau | 3/19/1971 | See Source »

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