Word: atlantae
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Atlanta...
...rush to meet deadlines with fastbreaking news, they give only bits and pieces of the whole story. Inevitably, they put the accent on spot news of conflict. Without any further effort to see the integration problem whole, so do most Southern papers. Says Editor Ralph McGill of the Atlanta Constitution, which does one of the South's best jobs: "Most newspapers seem to have forgotten that there is another side to the story, that Texas is going ahead with integration, that Arkansas is quiet, that North Carolina is quiet, that Tennessee is quiet, that southern Missouri, which is very...
...year-old weekly Defender (circ. 50,000) turned itself into a daily tabloid with a strong typographical resemblance to New York's Daily News and contents designed to compete with other Chicago dailies. The only Negro daily in the North, and the second in the U.S. (after Atlanta's World), the Defender still concentrates heavily on Negro news. But, for the first time, it is running such features as an I.N.S. summary of world news, Columnists Robert Spivack and Bennett Cerf, a crossword puzzle and six comics, e.g., Henry, Donald Duck...
Besides Martin, other major officers elected last week were Robert B. Hill '57 of North Little Rock, Ark, and Dunster House, vice-president; George H. Shapiro '58 of Atlanta, Ga. and Dunster House, bulletin editor; David N. Smith '58 of Saranac Lake, N.Y. and Kirkland House, treasurer; and Joseph L. Heisler, Jr. '57 of Wayne, Pa. and Winthrop House, secretary...
...know what kind of germ they are fighting. Hence, they do not know which drug to use. If they take a specimen from a patient, e.g., sputum, spinal fluid, they can grow the bacteria from it and eventually identify them, but this takes about a week. In Atlanta, Bacteriologist Max D. Moody of the U.S. Public Health Service described a method for achieving this result within an hour...