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...institutions have signed up. If the project survives, it could turn around the sagging enrollments suffered over the last decade by many of the nation's Sunday schools and synagogue classes. Because of TV, observes Virginia Saari, the director of education for the First United Methodist Church in Lakeland, Fla., "children are visually minded now. We have to appeal to them through their eyes if we want them to get the Bible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Holy Scripts | 9/6/1976 | See Source »

Wolff received a contract the following fall, inked it, and reported to the Tigers' Lakeland training camp in February of his senior year, still needing a semester to get his diploma...

Author: By Andrew P. Quigley, | Title: Harvard Second Baseman Makes It in Bushes | 10/17/1975 | See Source »

Wolff then reported to Lakeland in February again, only this time he played a season for the Clinton, Iowa Tiger farm club in the Class "A" Midwestern League...

Author: By Andrew P. Quigley, | Title: Harvard Second Baseman Makes It in Bushes | 10/17/1975 | See Source »

Where were the lawyers? In the surf, on Waikiki beaches or strolling along Kalakaua Avenue with their families, decked out in colorful sports shirts for the men and matching muumuus for their wives. Outgoing A.B.A. President Chesterfield Smith of Lakeland, Fla., called the no-show performance "deplorable, disgraceful and regrettable." All this past year Smith had been doing his feisty best to stir colleagues into facing up to the public suspicion and derision heaped on lawyers since Watergate. The beach bliss-out was a response the profession can ill afford...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: A.B.A.: No Show | 8/26/1974 | See Source »

...could Nixon take any comfort from a blast by Chesterfield Smith, a Lakeland, Fla., trial lawyer who is president of the American Bar Association. Said he: "I completely and wholly disagree with Mr. Nixon's contention that dragging out Watergate drags down America. The American people want wrongdoing uncovered and the wrongdoers punished, no matter how high the office they hold. By claiming Executive privilege, the President is obstructing justice, whether legally or illegally." Smith said that when Nixon claims that he is "not a crook," he ought "to define what a crook is. He has not aided...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WATERGATE: Pressing Hard for the Evidence | 4/1/1974 | See Source »

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