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Word: newspapermen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...might find themselves in court-before a Crump judge. There was always the chance of being beaned with a beer bottle at a nightclub, of getting beaten up in a mysterious street fight or simply being slugged by Memphis police, as were two overenthusiastic C.I.O. organizers in 1937. Memphis newspapermen did not forget one election night in 1928, when every reporter in sight was thrown into jail for threatened breach of the peace, a handily unbailable offense in Memphis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TENNESSEE: Ring-Tailed Tooter | 5/27/1946 | See Source »

Meet the Press (Fri. 10:30 p.m., Mutual). Three Washington newspapermen work on Ohio's Senator Robert Taft in one of radio's steadily best ad-lib forums...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Program Preview, May 27, 1946 | 5/27/1946 | See Source »

Harold E. Stassen, three-term governor of Minnesota, now wearing a gold duck in his lapel after three years as a Commander in the Navy, has, in three days in Cambridge, walked softly and talked gently to at least 2000 undergraduates, graduates, faculty members, and newspapermen...

Author: By R. SCOT Leavitt, | Title: Stassen Straddles Partisan Sides Of All Controversies | 5/9/1946 | See Source »

...weekend for the University's Nieman Fellows--79 of them past and present. Under the energetic leadership of Louis M. Lyons; curator of the Nieman Foundation, the newspapermen raced through three days of seminars, dinners, Derby parties, teas, and assorted reunions with President Conant, Deans Landis and Williams, and other faculty members...

Author: By J. ANTHONY Lewis, | Title: Ehrenburg and Simonov Highlight Nieman Fellow Weekend Reunion | 5/7/1946 | See Source »

...Hunan. Scores of beggar children wander with chopsticks and empty rice bowls through Hengyang or lie exhausted in the gutters, but the city's restaurants still serve ten-course feasts for those who can pay. We ate such a meal one night as guests of the local newspapermen, whose slightly fantastic prelude to the banquet was the presentation of carefully wrapped samples of the clay, weeds, rice husks and grass on which people were starving not far from our table...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PLAIN PEOPLE: Quiet | 5/6/1946 | See Source »

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