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Word: allens (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

After four months in Nazi prison camps, two U.S. foreign correspondents last week got their voices back. The two prisoners were Jay Allen, 41-year-old, Seattle-born veteran foreign correspondent (NANA) and 24-year-old, Brooklyn-born U.P. Correspondent Richard Hottelet, who steamed into New York Harbor aboard the U.S. transport West Point. Some of their experiences...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Exchanged Prisoners | 8/11/1941 | See Source »

...Allen was arrested March 13 while snooping in Occupied France. He was sentenced to four months instead of the customary two weeks to a month, and put in an ancient military prison at Chalon-sur-Saone. Though in Vichy he had been given special facilities, talked with Weygand and Pétain, circulated freely as far as North Africa, the Vichy Government, to show the Nazis he was no friend of theirs, now also put out a warrant for his arrest, on grounds of stealing documents "affecting the security of the French State." (They were really photostat copies of police...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Exchanged Prisoners | 8/11/1941 | See Source »

Though allowed to buy food, chubby Correspondent Allen lost 38 Ib. - for the first time in ten years his ribs showed faintly. He was also put through a farcical examination by an SS man from Paris, who accused him of being an agent of Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin. His diary was taken away on the last day. When he pointed out that it contained only the Nazi propaganda effusions, he was told gloomily that they considered it "too late" for propaganda...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Exchanged Prisoners | 8/11/1941 | See Source »

...last three weeks were spent in a Dijon military prison, a really tough stretch of solitary confinement, with 15 minutes a day in a tiny courtyard, no talking or smoking. But the joke was, concluded Allen, rather on the Germans than himself. In jail he talked to prisoners from Occupied France, Belgium and Holland, politicians, priests, officers, newspapermen, German deserters, an aristocrat or two, who told him much more about Occupied France than he ever could have got outside...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Exchanged Prisoners | 8/11/1941 | See Source »

...revolution. The tract was hilly, bone-dry, good for nothing except a scrubby growth of pine, and Strickland never bothered with it. He left Montgomery County, vanished into mists of hearsay; some people said he had been shot to death. In 1847 a Portuguese freebooter and slave trader named Allen Vince sued him for a $200 debt, got a judgment against the land. But Vince never bothered with it either...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OIL: Long Suit | 8/11/1941 | See Source »

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