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Views of 1920s Palestine.
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DURING THE FIRST DECADE OF THE BRITISH MANDATE, many American academics and intellectuals, both Jews and Christians, visited Palestine. They were interested in viewing the new Jewish experiments in agriculture, the development of new cities such as Tel Aviv, and the opening of the Hebrew University in 1925. Religious Christians who had been coming to the Holy Land since the mid-nineteenth century continued to do so. For Jews, the promise of a Jewish National Home, as articulated in...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Views of 1920s Palestine.
Judaism: A Quarterly Journal of Jewish Life and Thought
; DURING THE FIRST DECADE OF THE BRITISH MANDATE, many American academics and intellectuals, both Jews and Christians, visited Palestine. They were interested in viewing the new Jewish experiments in agriculture, the development of new cities such as Tel Aviv, and the opening of the Hebrew University
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Views of 1920s Palestine
Judaism
; DURING THE FIRST DECADE OF THE BRITISH MANDATE, many American academics and intellectuals, both Jews and Christians, visited Palestine. They were interested in viewing the new Jewish experiments in agriculture, the development of new cities such as Tel Aviv, and the opening of the Hebrew University
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The New Republic Reader: Eighty Years of Opinion and Debate.
National Review
; WE ENGLISH think of your magazine The New Republic as the American equivalent of our own lefty New Statesman. Confronted by a fat anthology of New Republic wit and wisdom, we would expect to find in it many of the characteristic pungent and unappetizing ingredients of New Statesmanship and New
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The merger that wasn't. (The Nation and The New Republic)
The Nation
; ... obviously, from the convenience of publishing the magazine in the city where you reside. By return mail, Straight offered U.S. News as an example of a political magazine published in the capital. Besides, he explained, he had moved to D.C. because that's where ...
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A tarnished 'republic.' ('New Republic' journalist Stephen Glass wrote a story of an event that never took place)
Commonweal
; 'Attitude' that led to a fall Cowering like a televangelist caught in the wrong motel room and now begging forgiveness, that was the ungenerous image that sprang to mind as I read the June 1 issue of the New Republic. The New Republic has always been a stringent magazine, the editors write,
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The New Republic, Peretz: a 30-year marriage.(off the record)(Martin Peretz)
St. Louis Journalism Review
; ... The New Republic went from reporting, opining and analyzing the news to becoming it. In 1998, the magazine's youngest staff writer ... was fired for journalistic fraud after fabricating sensational news stories. The office drama surrounding this incident became the ...
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Jewish voices in The New Republic
Jewish Exponent
; ... stinging objectivity of the testimonies of the survivors is met in these galleries by the tart objectivity of photographs, films, maps, statistics and objects." No doubt many must have followed the subtle turns of Wieseltier's measured argument with a sense of ...
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The New Republic at seventy. (70th anniversary)
National Review
; THE NEW REPUBLIC now celebrates its seventieth anniversary. While it has had its vicissitudes over the years it has always been an important cultural barometer, and at the present time it is one of the most interesting magazines in the United States. A magazine often draws energy and power from
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THE NEW REPUBLIC Will Martin Peretz get serious? He has an editor to choose - and his magazine's reputation to rescue
The Boston Globe
; Mark Jurkowitz, the Globe's ombudsman, also writes media criticism from time to time. CAMBRIDGE -- Consider it just one more Beltway institution in turmoil. At age 82, The New Republic finds that its long-standing reputation as a bible of the nation's political and opinion leaders is fraying. The
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Revolt at New Republic // Chicagoan to back alternative journal
Chicago Sun-Times
; The New Republic recently provoked a revolt among its contributing editors by supporting aid to the contras in Nicaragua, demonstrating again, in one contributor's view, the need for a new magazine. Convinced there is a slice of the political spectrum not carved out by existing publications, the
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