Word: summing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...organization man who really swings was what Warner Brothers wanted. So, for an undisclosed sum, they hired none other than Frank Sinatra, 47, as a new special assistant to help 71-year-old President Jack L. Warner on matters of high policy. Whether Sinatra might be heir apparent to Warner's movie-making empire was anybody's guess, but Hollywood insiders can readily identify the secret ingredient that qualifies Frankie to join the ranks of rising executives...
...know and think and expect. After thus tapping the flow of political thought, the dozens of correspondents working on the assignment filed their reports to TIME editorial headquarters in New York. There, Writer Ed Magnuson and Senior Editor Champ Clark analyzed and studied the evidence in detail and in sum. From it emerged some clear and fascinating patterns, outlined in the state-by-state survey in THE NATION this week, to provide an early-in-season guide to next year's political campaign...
...only his brother John but all the other members of that baronial Southern family for whom Novelist Faulkner was sometimes thought to speak. Faulkner, like any writer of genius was an original, and much of the fascination of his brother's memories lies in the fact that the sum of detail never accounts for the man and if John Faulkner furnishes few of the portentous correlations between literature and life that are the delight of graduate students, he splendidly evokes the flavor of boyhood in a small Deep Southern town surprised by the turn of the century...
...solemnly as a referee pacing off a long penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct, the clerk of the federal court in Atlanta read the verdict: "We, the jury, find in favor of Wallace Butts in the sum of $60,000. We find that Wallace Butts is entitled to recover punitive damages from Curtis Publishing Co. We assess punitive damages from Curtis Publishing Co. We assess punitive damages in the sum...
...beginning, TIME was something of a digest. Now our bill for our own reporting, here and abroad, runs to more than $5,000,000 a year, a sum matched by no other magazine. Basic to our operation is our writing, editing and research staff in New York, where the magazine is produced each week. The heart of our method is a constant interchange of ideas between editor, writer and correspondent, a process necessary to anticipate the shape and content of stories, assemble the facts and form the judgments. In the fields of music, art, literature and entertainment...