In a Jan. 15, 1942, letter, the President wrote: "I honestly think it would be best for the country to keep baseball going."
To the Editor: Egon Mayer's Jan. 29 letter brings into focus a troubling point.
Mr. Mugabe was reacting to a Jan. 25 letter from three Supreme Court justices.
To the Editor: You made an amusing typographical error in my Jan. 30 letter on the Michelangelo discovery.
That, at any rate, is what 35 law professors argued in a Jan. 23 letter sent to Congressional leaders.
But the lawyers said that to their knowledge, the district attorney's office never saw the Jan. 11 letter to Mr. Luethke.
To the Editor: I disagree with the assertion, made in a Jan. 17 letter, that whenever the government gains power, individual citizens lose it.
"I am compelled to write now because by all appearances the situation is progressively getting worse," Mr. Keeley wrote in the Jan. 31 letter.
But judging from Peter Meyer's Jan. 20 letter, maybe Andre was right.
In a Jan. 11 letter, Collins urged the coaches that with so much on the line, they consider further negotiations with the aid of a mediator.