Word: unpaid
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...unpaid, disgruntled Republican workers last week went a reassuring whisper from the offices of Mr. Cooke: the pot was being saved for the November attack on the New Deal, would be all the bigger then. After all, the nomination of bald, affable Mr. Cooke for U. S. Senator was a cinch (result: Cooke, around 650,000; Albert H. Ladner, of Philadelphia, about...
...Spaniards originally interned in refugee camps in France, some 60,000 are working in unpaid labor battalions, 13,000 in paid labor battalions. About 17,000 entered the Foreign Legion and are in Syria. Only a few hundred are in the volunteer battalions in France. Some 6,000 are in refugee camps in North Africa, 4,000 working on road gangs there. About 75,000 were absorbed into war industries, 30,000 into private employment. Hundreds returned to Spain, until returns were stopped last month. Some 180,000 remain in the refugee camps. Last week the camps were ordered closed...
...none too congenial partner. In 1928, he bought her out for a fat $335,000, partly in cash. Unable to continue payments during depression in 1936, he gave Widow Milton and her daughters $120,000 in bonds, $100,000 in preferred stock in place of a $160,000 unpaid balance. Not long after that, Publisher Milton turned out 17 of his employes, including his father's old friend, Walter Johnson. Meantime a new menace arose on Publisher Milton's horizon...
...that time, Ingersoll was publisher of TIME, but his project was his own and TIME Inc. had no desire to go into the newspaper business. So last April he resigned from TIME, gathered a staff of unpaid writers to turn out experimental dummies, looked around for a couple of rich men to back...
...actually nine parts routine. Before a show opens, it is almost automatic. He begins by announcing the production, follows up with announcements about who is in the cast, who is directing, what the play is about, where it will tryout, when it will open. With luck, that produces ten unpaid advertisements. His first real chance to prove his worth comes in landing big advance stories in the Sunday papers. At such times his only task is selling the editor his idea for a story. Once the idea is sold, Maney (unlike other press agents) writes a story too good...