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newspapers

n. (plural of newspaper English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: newspaper)

Usage examples of "newspapers".

He also noted that a study in the spring of 1964, when Vietnam was a minor issue in the newspapers, showed that 53 percent of college-educated people were willing to send troops to Vietnam, but only 33 percent of grade school-educated people were so willing.

When this country had few newspapers it was ten times more the prey of false reports and delusions than it is now.

Richard Morris, on the basis of an inspection of colonial newspapers in the 1700s.

Their belief in all arguments for expansion paraded in the newspapers was probably not great.

Alliance are united in their war against trusts, and in the promotion of the doctrine that farmers should establish cooperative stores, and manufactures, and publish their own newspapers, conduct their own schools, and have a hand in everything else that concerns them as citizens or affects them personally or collectively.

True, certain influential newspapers had been pushing hard, even hysterically.

The Platt Amendment was now seen, not only by the radical and labor press, but by newspapers and groups all over the United States, as a betrayal.

Gatewood, in his book Smoked Yankees and the Struggle for Empire, reproduces and analyzes 114 letters to Negro newspapers written by bl ack soldiers in the period 1898-1902.

Its main newspaper, Appeal to Reason, for which Debs wrote, had half a million subscribers, and there were many other Socialist newspapers around the country, so that, all together, perhaps a million people read the Socialist press.

There were fifty-five weekly Socialist newspapers in Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, and summer encampments that drew thousands of people.

Post Office Department began taking away the mailing privileges of newspapers and magazines that printed antiwar articles.

Negro community to the war despite the attempts of Negro newspapers and Negro leaders to mobilize black sentiment.

Harlem apartment in New York, a young Negro teacher of mathematics named Bob Moses saw a photo in the newspapers of the Greensboro sit-inners.

These newspapers printed antiwar articles, gave news about the harassment of GIs and practical advice on the legal rights of servicemen, told how to resist military domination.

The newspapers, instead of calling on people to send in the names of the unenumerated, would have rejoiced at the small returns, as they would have done if the census had been for the purpose of levying the federal tax upon each place according to its population.