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Newsweek
(redirected from News Week)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

Newsweek

U.S. weekly newsmagazine, published in New York City. Founded (as News-Week) in 1933 by Thomas J.C. Martyn, a former editor of Time, it merged with Today magazine in 1937. It initially offered a rather drab survey of the news with columns of analysis. After World War II it grew livelier, especially after its purchase by Philip Graham, publisher of The Washington Post, in 1961. It has a strong reputation for accurate, brisk, and vivid reporting and, like Time, presents news in terse summary form, organized by departments.



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I passed around the excellent insert from the CD as selections from Songs of Protest played: "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," "Eve of Destruction," "With God on Our Side," "Universal Soldier, "It's Good News Week," and "War.
Travelling cross-country Mercer anticipates two potential hazards with his theory of covering the news; the first being a slow news week, but worse is an event that is too horrific to satirize.
Thanks to Bruce for sharing his heart and mind with us in these pages, and a Blessed Easter to all who preach good news week in and week out.
 
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