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Bergman, et al, in The Complete Journalism vol. I, transcribes the word "Rone" as "Zone."
these zones as early as the mid-eighteenth century and they continued to be discussed in geographic journals
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
marks of punctuation" (Herbert Bergman, et al., eds., The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
Evening Star on October 10, 1845, but in a more critical manner (see Bergman, et al, eds., The Journalism
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984), 235 and Carl Degler, "The Locofocos: Urban 'Agrarians'," Journal
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
see also: Vincent DiGirolamo, "Newsboy Funerals: Tales of Sorrow and Solidarity in Urban America," Journal
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
Scholars have continued to support Holloway's claim, including Herbert Bergman in Walt Whitman, The Journalism
conclusively, but Edward Grier suggests that "this sort of moralizing . . . belongs to [Whitman's] journalizing