Word: respective
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...have recently noticed your Letters and reference to "Frogs in Texas" (TIME, Oct. 26). I have every respect for Mr. Joe Fitzgerald's letter referring to "those Texas Frogs" but do want to comment on Frog No. 20. In this letter we have 20 frogs accurately sized beginning with No. t about as large as a walnut up to No. 20. It is assumed that each frog is exactly twice as large as the one preceding it in the "Bell Ringing Act." Let us set down this little problem as follows...
...Soviet purchases from the U. S. of 52%. Last week Chairman Peter A. Bogdanov of Amtorg explained & complained: "It must be clear to any one engaged in large commercial operations that the basic prerequisite is adequate banking accommodations. These have not been provided in the United States with respect to Soviet business...
...murder, a group of public-spirited whites joined with a group of public-spirited blacks in a Southern Commission on the Study of Lynching. Chairman of the commission which approached its problem dispassionately was George Fort Milton, publisher of the Chattanooga News, author of The Age of Hate. Other respect-commanding white members included Julian Harris, news director of the Atlanta Constitution and son of Uncle Remus' creator; President William Joseph McGlothlin of Furman University; Dr. Howard Washington Odum of the University of North Carolina. Noted Negroes on the Commission were President John Hope of Atlanta University, Principal Robert...
...people over 50 are usually sensible enough to have dropped them. ... I think if a picture or play was produced with only children ... or oldsters ... in the cast, it would be the surest safeguard . . . against the critics. . . ." So says seasoned Marie Dressier. Director Wesley Ruggles (Cimarron) shares her respect for young actors. In Are These Our Children? which he wrote himself, he takes a cast mostly under 18, guides them through a depressing epic of juvenile delinquency which ends at the electric chair. His story corresponds roughly to the one which any newsreader detects between the lines of items concerning...
Since 1925 North & South American copper producers have watched the African mines with misgivings tinged with respect. From an output of only 90,000 tons in 1925 Africa rose to 160,000 tons in 1930. Katanga, controlled by the Belgian Government, backed by British capital, operating under strictest of colonial regimes, rapidly rose to lead the Africans. U. S. producers have to dig deep when they prospect new veins but Katanga's ore lies so close to the surface they do their prospecting by airplane. Labor costs are on a like scale. A Bantu boy working hard in Katanga...