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Word: newspapermen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Every August newspapermen are invited to Detroit for a preview of Chrysler's new models (see p. 57). This year the preview was mostly tanks, bomber fuselages, anti-aircraft guns, Army trucks. When, at the end of a six-hour tour of defense production, a Chrysler official sarcastically suggested that the newspapermen might also want to see the new cars, a wag said: "Yeah, we might as well have a look at the by-product...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chrysler's Sideshow | 9/8/1941 | See Source »

Opening Volume I of Carl Sandburg's Abraham Lincoln: The War Years to page 553, he read the assembled newspapermen what the Emancipator said to Mary Livermore, the Civil War reformer and social worker who visited him for a word of cheer and comfort after one of the war's bloodiest battles, Antietam...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: As Lincoln Said . . . | 9/1/1941 | See Source »

...tent pitched on a rocky shore, the King's justice last week came to the remote Belcher Islands in Hudson Bay. At a table covered with the Union Jack sat Justice C. P. Plaxton from Toronto. Before him was a. scratch jury of miners, newspapermen, the crew of the schooner which had sailed 13 days to bring the court to the islands. From the half-tanned sealskins of the Eskimo defendants, witnesses and attentive spectators rose a sour, oily stink...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Murderous Messiahs | 9/1/1941 | See Source »

...military prison, a really tough stretch of solitary confinement, with 15 minutes a day in a tiny courtyard, no talking or smoking. But the joke was, concluded Allen, rather on the Germans than himself. In jail he talked to prisoners from Occupied France, Belgium and Holland, politicians, priests, officers, newspapermen, German deserters, an aristocrat or two, who told him much more about Occupied France than he ever could have got outside...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Exchanged Prisoners | 8/11/1941 | See Source »

However the U.S. looked to the Ambassador's aristocratic eyes, no flicker of resentment showed in them. Antagonistic newspapermen who baited him found themselves answered gravely and at length, could not swear that he knew he was being baited...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WAR & PEACE: Ambassador | 7/28/1941 | See Source »

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