Word: paragrapher
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...reporters on the job in Gordonsville, Va. the other night when Cora Walles and her brother William were finally killed and the house burned around their bodies, I cannot help resenting the reflections cast in your last paragraph on members of the posse slicing up the bodies of the dead negroes and taking them home for souvenirs (TIME, May 25). That part of the account is absolutely false, as the bodies were turned over to a licensed undertaker, who buried both bodies in the family burying ground on the place where the unfortunate battle between the members of the finest...
...teaching themselves, and like it! Under the direction of famed research man Dr. Donald A. Laird, the students prepare, lead and present their own discussions---but he does have to do a bit of refereeing when the arguments get too hot. COLLEGIATE DIGEST presents here in "picture and paragraph" some of the unusual features of these seminars...
...have organized our discussion into three main divisions, but have numbered consecutively the resolutions pertaining to all subjects regardless of the division under which they fall. We trust that this will facilitate easy reference. Each resolution contains a paragraph or two of explanation, and subsequently a short paragraph stating out recommendation for improvement...
...proceeded to spoil completely the happy satisfaction which had been glowing in the face of Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. since his comparatively triumphant appearance before the Committee last fortnight (TIME, May 11). From that gentleman farmer's prepared statement, Mr. May quoted a paragraph asserting that under present law, U. S. corporations would this year withhold from stockholders more than $4,500,000,000 of income, thus depriving the Treasury of some $1,300,.000,000 which it would receive in individual income taxes if that sum were distributed as dividends. From the Committee statement...
Sirs: My attention has been repeatedly called to a paragraph in the April 13 issue of TIME in which it was stated that H. J. Heinz Co. had contributed foods that had been under Pittsburgh flood waters to the Red Cross. . . . This remark is not true and is unfair to H. J. Heinz Co., and to the Red Cross as well. When Mr. Howard Heinz, president of H. J. Heinz Co., saw the devastating effects of the St. Patrick's Day flood, he immediately gave us two cars of food products-one for Pittsburgh and half a car each...