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Excerpts from the Moran book (Winston Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 1940-1965) were published in London by the Sunday Times, in the U.S. by LIFE, and last week all of Britain was arguing about them. "Sir Winston is having his phagocytes counted, his pneumogastric system checked and the eliminatory functions examined in a public post-mortem," raged Columnist Cassandra in the Daily Mirror. The medical journal Lancet noted icily that "the public's trust in the medical profession derives largely from its conviction that what transpires between patient and doctor will not be bandied about," and the British...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: Inside Winston Churchill | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

While extending their sympathies to the struck papers in editorials, the other New York dailies-the Times, Daily News and Post-continued to publish. With no competition in the afternoon, the Post increased its press run from 400,000 to 600,000. Meanwhile, rumors spread that the embryo World Journal Tribune might collapse in the face of adamant union demands. "We don't intend to go out of business," insisted Matt Meyer, "and we're not going to." The papers' employees were not so sure. With 2,000 on the dismissal list, even those who were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: How Not to Negotiate in New York | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

This issue marks a step in an uncertain direction for The Harvard Review. While many college magazines long to reach audiences outside their universities, the Review has abandoned its usual political emphasis to publish an issue that will be of interest chiefly at Harvard. The issue suffers, indeed, from the insularity of some of Harvard's more inbred magazines; the subject is "The University and the Arts," but the contributors do not include an artist who is not associated with a university, or a scholar who does not consider himself an artist or impresario. Only two contributors have no immediate...

Author: By Donald E. Graham, | Title: The Harvard Review and the Loeb | 5/3/1966 | See Source »

...began to hang around Leary's office after classes," she says, "licking envelopes, tying letters, and running errands. And I faithfully read all the papers they put out." The next year she became circulation manage for the Psychedelic Review which Leary helped publish. She graduated from Radcliffe in Mathematics and Philosophy in 1963, the same year Alpert was fired from Harvard for administering LSD to a student and Leary fired for neglecting his teaching duties...

Author: By Allison B. Conrad, | Title: Local LSD PR-Girl Tells How to Make (And Take) Those Little Sugar Cubes | 4/29/1966 | See Source »

Inoffensive Predictions. Because he had just been elected to Parliament, Churchill asked Ohlinger not to publish anything that might jeopardize his career. The young reporter, who later became a successful Ohio attorney, was super-scrupulous. He quoted only a few inoffensive remarks in his story in the Inlander. After Churchill's death, Ohlinger, now 89, decided it would do no harm to publish the remainder of the interview. What if Churchill had suggested that Russia should be permitted to move into China? Considering his youth, the hour, and the amount of whisky he had consumed, the young imperialist said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Advice to the World | 4/22/1966 | See Source »

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