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Word: newspapermen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...Harvard party of about 150 football players, soccer players, coaches, trainers and newspapermen will leave for New Haven at 8:55 o'clock Friday morning and are scheduled to arrive in New Haven at 12:10 o'clock. They will have a look at the Yale Bowl for a few minutes and then go out to Choate School for an afternoon workout...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRIESELL BEST IN U.S., SAYS BILL BINGHAM | 11/20/1940 | See Source »

...cause greatly by keeping their noses in their business and leaving it up to their editors to take stand on political issues. This policy has been successfully followed by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch; it was traditional on some of the best papers of pre-Hitler Europe. It bolsters newspapermen's morale by giving them their say in the paper's policy, and rises the status of editorial writers from stooges to thinking human begins. However, it is likely to throw the publishers into the ghastly predicament of profiting from a cause in which they don't believe; and rather...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THIRD TERM AND FOURTH ESTATE | 11/9/1940 | See Source »

...group of 65 newspapermen, led by the late, famed Publisher Victor Fremont Lawson of the Chicago Daily News and his onetime partner, Melville Elijah Stone, met in Chicago and organized the Associated Press of Illinois. It was the first big non-commercial news agency (incorporated in New York in 1900 under a law providing for the organization of "fish & game" clubs) to share news dispatches among its member papers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: News Between Covers | 11/4/1940 | See Source »

...digress." Snavely's denials to newspapermen that he coached Cornell from the bench last Saturday are, from what he wrote in two football letters to two Carolina players two years ago, to be taken with several grains of saline. The man doesn't like the press, and according to himself, will not give it straight stories...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPORTS of the CRIMSON | 11/2/1940 | See Source »

...Crookston, Minn., raised seed corn to pay his way through a year of Antioch College, went to the University of Minnesota (but did not graduate), got a job on the Minneapolis Journal when he was 21, married a reporter on the same paper, took a year off, like all newspapermen, to free-lance writing fiction. Back on the St. Paul Despatch and Pioneer Press, he began writing politics, fathered three children, was an active Newspaper Guildsman (but dropped out in disgust two years ago), became Governor Stassen's confidential political adviser and close friend during the campaign...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MINNESOTA: New Senator | 10/21/1940 | See Source »

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