Word: ansel
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...known citizens who want an international police force after the war are Vice President Henry Wallace, Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles, Ambassador John Winant, Republican hopeful Harold Stassen of Minnesota, Philip Murray of the C.I.O., Matthew Woll of the A.F. of L., and Politico-Pundits Dorothy Thompson, Edgar Ansel Mowrer and Max Eastman. The president of the British Section of the New Commonwealth Society, for more than a decade the most vocal and powerful British group backing an international police force, is none other than Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill...
Last week onetime Chicago Daily News Paris Correspondent Edgar Ansel Mowrer, who had just resigned as Deputy Director of OWI after a row with the State Department over North African policy, offered his explanation. Said...
Tone & Content. Brain of the foreign propaganda division is its planning and intelligence board in Washington-which includes an ex-foreign correspondent (the Chicago Daily News's Edgar Ansel Mowrer), an economist (James Warburg), representatives of the Army (Colonel Oscar Solbert), Navy (Captain Homer L. Grosskopf), State Department. The board's job is to sift the vast portfolio of U.S. Government information on domestic and foreign events, pass it on to the operations division in the form of directives that fix the U.S. propaganda line for each country...
...Essayist Henry F. Pringle of Harper's and Collier's; former Washington Correspondent Ulric J. Bell, of the Louisville Courier-Journal; New York Times Book Reviewer Charles Poore; Columbia Broadcasting System's Vice President William B. Lewis; TIME'S Allen Grover, Chicago Daily Newsman Edgar Ansel Mowrer...
Last week these facts, showing how the natural barbarism of children protects them from shock of war's gruesomeness, were reported by the Chicago Daily News's Foreign Correspondent Edgar Ansel Mowrer to 300 worried educators, social workers and parents at a Midwest conference on "Tomorrow's Children" in Chicago. The conferees had met to consider what, if anything, might be done to protect today's and tomorrow's children from the tension and insecurity of war. Although his observations had shown children standing up to the war remarkably well, Mr. Mowrer urged: Let parents...