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Newsweek and wrote
* What We'll Find Inside the Atom by Dr. Leon Lederman is an essay he wrote for the September 15, 2008 issue of Newsweek
Newsweek magazine's David Ansen, summarizing the theatrical release, wrote, " The payoff to The Abyss is pretty damn silly — a portentous deus ex machina that leaves too many questions unanswered and evokes too many other films.
Newsweek wrote, " Tracy hilariously sparks Father of the Bride with one of his surest comedy performances.
In August 1967, a Newsweek reviewer wrote: Dont Look Back is really about fame and how it menaces art, about the press and how it categorizes, bowdlerizes, sterilizes, universalizes or conventionalizes an original like Dylan into something it can dimly understand.
In his review for Newsweek magazine, Jack Kroll wrote, " Allen's growth in every department is lovely to behold.
He wrote articles for Newsweek, The New Yorker, and Life.
President Barack Obama wrote a pro-Title IX op &# 8209 ; ed published in Newsweek magazine.
In his review for Newsweek magazine, David Ansen wrote, " A one joke movie?
Saturday Review wrote in 1964 that he " walked with artistic dignity all his life ," and the same year Newsweek praised his " mature approach to trombone jazz.
In 2011, he wrote columns that appeared in publications such as The Independent, The Sunday Times, and Newsweek.
" The CBS Morning News was simply shot dead ," wrote Jonathan Alter in Newsweek.
In State of Denial: Bush at War, Part III ( as excerpted in Newsweek magazine ), Bob Woodward of the Washington Post wrote that on March 16, 2006 Abizaid was in Washington to testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Newsweek magazine's David Ansen wrote, " Everyone seems to be working toward the same goal of relaxed insanity.
After agreeing not to write on the topic, he looked for another venue for his work, deciding on Newsweek magazine, for which he wrote a signed column, " Business Tides ," from 1946 to 1966.
Klein denied authorship again in Newsweek, speculating that another writer wrote it.
In 2002, Bill Powell, former Moscow bureau chief at Newsweek, wrote Treason, an account of the experiences of former GRU colonel Vyacheslav Baranov.
In 1975, journalist Bill Moyers, a former Johnson aide and press secretary, wrote in Newsweek: " When they come to canonize political aides, will be the first summoned, for no man ever negotiated the shark-infested waters of the Potomac with more decency or charity or came out on the other side with his integrity less shaken.
In a 1980 interview with the New York Times, de Borchgrave mentions that he came up with the idea for a novel after he and his wife had to hide in the English countryside, after anonymous threats were made in response to a Newsweek article he wrote that named some of the terrorists behind the 1972 Munich massacre.
Bernstein is a frequent guest and analyst on television news programs, and most recently wrote articles for Newsweek / The Daily Beast, comparing Rupert Murdoch's News of The World phone-hacking scandal to Watergate.
Newsweek wrote about the new Alley Theatre,the most striking theatre in the U. S. … another step along the road toward ending Broadway ’ s domination of the American theatre ,” and Sydney Johnson of The Montreal Star wrote, “… it looks as though the new Alley Theatre is going to be one of the best – and probably the very best – in the U. S. at least, simply because the building has been designed to house a specified stage and auditorium instead of the other way round .”
Fellow Washington Post reviewer Desson Howe queered the " perplexing fusion of cartoon and docudrama ..." In his review for Newsweek, David Ansen wrote, " His scenes have no shape, his characters are stick figures, the wit is undergraduate and his soggy set pieces of slow-motion carnage are third-rate Peckinpah imitations.
In the summer of 2011 Simon wrote the cover story for Newsweek about the August riot disturbances.
In May 1992 he joined Newsweek and wrote the column " Public Lives ", which won a National Headliner Award in 1994.
Klein denied authorship again in Newsweek, speculating that another writer wrote it.

Newsweek and film
Newsweek called it, " a film as odd and mysterious as its subjects, and quite unforgettable.
New York critics also discovered Peckinpah's unusual Western, with Newsweek naming Ride the High Country the best film of the year and Time placing it on its best-ten list.
" David Ansen provided one of the rare negative reviews of the film for Newsweek.
Newsweek said that the film " has no more sense of its own ludicrousness than a village idiot stumbling in manure ", but a later article read: " Astoundingly photogenic, infinitely curvaceous, Sharon Tate is one of the most smashing young things to hit Hollywood in a long time.
Newsweek revealed in June 2001 that print ads for at least four movies released by Columbia Pictures, including A Knight's Tale and The Animal ( 2001 ), contained glowing comments from a film reviewer who did not exist.
Joe Morgenstern for Newsweek initially panned the film as a " squalid shoot -' em-up-up for the moron trade.
David Ansen from Newsweek called the film " a satire of the documentary form itself, complete with perfectly faded clips from old TV shows of the band in its mod and flower-child incarnations " ( qtd.
Newsweek named it " a unique film, perhaps the most fascinating and affecting documentary ever made about a great movie star ".
* The 2000 film Harrison's Flowers is the story of a Newsweek photojournalist lost in the war-torn former Yugoslavia.
Many critics expressed concern with what they saw as bigotry, with Newsweek describing the film as " a right-wing fantasy ", Variety as " a specious, phony glorification of the police and police brutality with a superhero whose antics become almost satire " and a raging review by Pauline Kael of The New Yorker who accused Eastwood of a " single-minded attack against liberal values ".
The film won the Berlin Film Festival jury prize, as well as positive reviews from the New York Times and Newsweek.
" Newsweek associated the film with B movies " about the small town threatened by alien invaders ," and said it was well made but " oddly unresonant.
Writing for Newsweek, critic Jack Kroll thought the early part of the film was handled " with wit and style ", although he went on to say that the director was " hamstrung by Lorenzo Semple's script ".
The film received a scathing review from Singer but was well received by others, including reviewers at Time, Variety and Newsweek.
Charlie Cole, working for Newsweek and on the same balcony as Stuart Franklin, hid his roll of film containing Tank Man in a Beijing Hotel toilet, sacrificing an unused roll of film and undeveloped images of wounded protesters after the PSB raided his room, destroyed the two rolls of film just mentioned and forced him to sign a confession.
West Coast critics praised the film and when it was screened in New York City in 1964, Scorpio Rising garnered positive reviews in The New Yorker, Variety and Newsweek.
Following a negative review, Time magazine received letters from fans of the movie, and according to journalist Peter Biskind, the impact of critic Pauline Kael in her positive review of the film ( October 1967 New Yorker ) led other reviewers to follow her lead and re-evaluate the film ( notably Newsweek and Time ).
" Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle hailed the film as " a masterpiece ," while numerous others such as Ty Burr of The Boston Globe, Peter Travers of Rolling Stone, Richard Corliss of Time, and David Ansen of Newsweek gave the film positive reviews.
" Newsweek magazine's David Ansen wrote, " A curious mix of soap opera and social history, Lumet's film shouldn't work, yet its fusion of oddly matched parts proves emotionally overpowering.
He was a critic for Time, Newsweek, and Rolling Stone, among other magazines, before moving into film writing.

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