Word: page
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...tough customer is the 108-year-old St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Only five years ago, the morning Globe was at death's door. Its makeup was sloppy; its local coverage was dull and spotty. The lace-kerchief editorial page was dubbed even by staffers as "the old lady." In 1955, Chain Publisher Samuel I. Newhouse bought the Globe-Democrat for $6,250,-000 and set about saving...
...editorial page that the Amberg stamp was most heavily seen: the Globe-Democrat now stands foursquare behind conservatives ranging from General Douglas MacArthur to Guy Lombardo. And as a Boy Scoutmaster, Amberg can always find room for a moving editorial about, for example, small boys killed by lightning while selling Boy Scout circus tickets ("Certainly there must be an es- pecial place reserved in Heaven for faithful little boys . . ."). As an old St. Louis newsman puts it: "Amberg is a bore, but he's a driving bore...
Last March, reading a full-page ad in the New York Times, L. (for Lester) B. Sullivan, 39, police commissioner of Montgomery, Ala., decided that the Times had done him wrong. Sullivan had not even been mentioned by name; the ad was an appeal for funds to defend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Southern Negro leader, against charges of income-tax evasion. Nonetheless, Sullivan sued for libel, seeking $500,000 damages against the Times and four other defendants. Last week in Montgomery, a circuit court jury gave Lester Sullivan every dollar he asked...
Later, the Society offered an extremely effective staging of Stevens' dramatic monologue Among the Candles, in which than Revere '60 captured a proper hypnotic lyricism; and, under the rection of Asher and a strong production Beckett's Endgame, with accomplished performances in its four page by Philip S. Weld '60, Brian B. Doyle '62, and E. Gerstenfeld...
...student as he works. The first question appears in a window at the top of the box, and a blank space is provided in another window for the student to write out his answer. When he is finished, he inserts his pencil eraser in a vertical slot, moves the page up until the second question and the answer to the first appear in the window. The paper cannot be moved backward to find the answer first...