Word: paragraphing
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...CRIMSON believed that the Commission was laboring under a misapprehension. This belief was corroborated in a paragraph by Frank Ober from his exchange of letters with Grenville Clark, covered elsewhere in this issue. Said Mr. Ober...
Despite Mr. Hoover's letter, the CRIMSON stands by its two stories on FBI activity at Yale. The following paragraph by paragraph analysis of Mr. Hoover's letter shows wherein we believe Mr. Hoover errs...
...Paragraph 3: The articles specifically stated that this kind of investigation was not under attack: "no one had objections to the FBI's loyalty checks on men who had apphed for government jobs. These checks are made in the open by the known FBI agents...
...Paragraph 4: Provost Furniss' exact statement, as he sat in his office, was: "These gum-shoes are in and out of here every day." At the time, the conversation was concerned strictly with the FBI. The "every day" was placed in quotes purposely to indicate that it was not the author's report of a fact, but his repetition of what had been told him, in this case by the man most qualified to make such a statement...
...Paragraph 5: The first statement was based on the opinions of such men as Provost Furniss, Professor of Philosophy Paul Weiss, Robert S. Cohen, and in fact most of the 30-odd men with whom the author spoke at Yale. Moreover, the FBI documents made public at the Judith Coplon trial last week prove that the FBI does use a large number of "confidential informants...