Word: dears
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Dear Subscriber...
...North Africa came a sardonic, familiar voice, welcoming passers-by to the microphone: "Anybody here from out of town? Step on board, sailor. What's your name? . . . Boys, break it up and let this lovely vision come through. That's it, dear. What's your name?" New Yorkers who recalled his famed sidewalk interviews from Times Square ("Step up, brother, stop your mad rush to the grave") recognized the voice of brassy George Braidwood ("The Real") McCoy, radio buttonholer extraordinary (TIME, Oct. 21, 1940). They found out last week that Private McCoy was now playing...
...Dear Fellow Americans. . . . We ask you to spend 30 minutes with us facing quietly and without passion or prejudice a danger which threatens all of us-a danger so great that if it is not met and conquered now, even though we win this war, we shall be defeated in victory. . . . This danger is race hatred...
Last week Lewis wrote the "predatory Park Avenue lawyer" a letter. It began "The Honorable William H. Davis, Dear Sir" and it ended "Yours respectfully." In between, John Lewis cooed his willingness to appear before the Board at any time it named...
...have thought with all our heart . . . that the horror and destruction of bombing should be spared our dear Rome ... the holy city of Catholicism. . . . We thought ourselves justified in hoping [for] . . . the consolation, among so many bitter experiences, of finding a reception by the contending parties of our intercession in favor of Rome. Alas, this so reasonable hope has been disappointed. . . . Our soul is touched with unusual affliction...