Word: depositer
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...Negroes) for his trial on the charge of killing Jonathan M. Daniels, 26, an Episcopal seminarian from Keene, N.H. The victim and the Rev. Richard Morrisroe, 26, a Catholic priest from Chicago, had been among 28 persons arrested last Aug. 14 while picketing three stores in nearby Fort Deposit that allegedly discriminate against Negroes. Jailed in Hayneville, the workers were abruptly released without bond a week later, on the same day that their cases were transferred to federal court. Shortly afterward, in front of the red frame Cash Store two blocks from the courthouse, the two men of the cloth...
From a federal court in Montgomery at week's end came a final, Sophoclean footnote to the tragedy. Ruling that civil rights workers' original arrests in Fort Deposit were illegal, Judge Frank M. Johnson held that they had simply been exercising their right of peaceful assembly. Thus, Jon Daniels' life might never have been lost if his own civil rights had not been violated in the first place...
...foreign nations have of supporting their faltering currencies with dollars. Shopkeepers in many parts of the world give generous discounts to tourists who pay in dollars. Millionaires in Latin America and other developing areas convert their own currencies into dollars?paying a high premium for the privilege?and often deposit the dollars in U.S. banks...
...Black Bastards!" Both victims were among 29 civil rights demonstrators who were arrested Aug. 14 at nearby Fort Deposit after they had picketed stores, demanding equal job opportunities for local Negroes. After being held for nearly a week in the county jail at Hayneville, they were unexpectedly released one afternoon last week. As they waited outside the Hayneville courthouse for a ride back to Selma, the group began "singing and demonstrating and creating general disorder," as Lowndes County Solicitor Carlton Perdue put it. Then Daniels, Father Morrisroe and two Negro girls strolled across the street to Varner's grocery...
...lovers who like to look at the price tags too, this book is just the ticket. The annual report of Sotheby's, Britain's venerable auction house, which has been a British institution for years, has graduated into a profusely illustrated volume worthy of deposit on any drawing-room table. Ivory Hammer 2 is the second annual report to be published in the U.S. It reprises the 1963-64 season, during which Sotheby's knocked down an unprecedented $37 million worth of art, from an 11.80-carat unset emerald ($65,800) to the bugle that blew...