Word: post-dispatch
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Smallness v. Sincerity. Outstanding churchmen were notably chary last week about expressing clear-cut opinions on the Supreme Court decision. But the press was outspoken. Said the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "If a small sect can be denied its constitutional rights, the way is open to deny them to other sects." Said the New York Times: "Jehovah's Witnesses suffer because they are a small and, to many, an obnoxious sect. The minorities whose civil rights are threatened are always small and, to many, obnoxious. . . . Yet their treatment is the test, and will always be the test...
Said the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Richard L. Stokes: "I have seen things on this trip that would inspire and electrify the country, but everything inspirational that I have written was cut out by the censors...
...year ago. St. Louis groaned; it had trounced the machine for giving it some of the worst circuit judges in history, for conniving in the State Democratic organization's attempt to steal the Governorship (TIME, March 23); it wanted no more of Hannegan & Co. Snapped the Post-Dispatch: "The President's action is an affront to thousands of citizens...
Voters, hopping mad, can hardly wait for the Nov. 3 election to turn the rascals out. But well aware is the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, one of the able press guardians of Missouri morals, that Judgment Day does not fall on Nov. 3. Last week, with a two-page editorial spread, it began a campaign to memorialize two other dates: June 5, last day for candidates to file; Aug. 4, the primary...
...Said the Post-Dispatch...