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  1. John Donald McPartland (1911–1958) was a writer specializing in pulp fiction crime whose career was ended by an early death at age 47.

  2. Jan 25, 2023 · John McPartland, a white BART board member, used the term "cotton-pickin'" to praise three Black staff members' work on racial equity. The board voted to censure him and remove him from committees, but he apologized and said he had no ill intent.

    • Dan Brekke
    • KQED Editor And Reporter
  3. Nov 8, 2023 · John McPartland, I’ll See You In Hell. A backwoods town in the Ozarks has a secret called Witch Cave. This secret is so powerful it drives a few locals delirious with dreams of unlimited wealth. They want to uncover the riches within, but there are a couple problems. Nobody knows exactly where it’s hidden. And the cave is dangerous.

  4. Feb 9, 2018 · In 1947, Margaret Mead reviewed “Sex in Our Changing World,” by John McPartland, a blunt meditation on the history of sex in the United States. The general thesis of the book is essentially...

  5. John MCPARTLAND, Assistant Professor | Cited by 4,457 | of University of Vermont, VT (UVM) | Read 117 publications | Contact John MCPARTLAND

  6. John McPartland was born April 13, 1911, in Chicago, Illinois. In 1943, he was inducted into the U.S. Army, and later, as an Army Reservist, he served again in the Korean War, at which point he became a staff writer on the Stars and Stripes newspaper.

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  8. John McPartland was born on 13 April 1911 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He was a writer, known for Street of Sinners (1957), The Lost Missile (1958) and Johnny Cool (1963). He died on 14 September 1958 in Monterey, California, USA.

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