Word: chapman
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Puerto Ricans rejoiced. The U.S. Department of the Interior, which helped push the election bill through Congress, was happy, too. Said Under Secretary Oscar L. Chapman: "People and nations all over the world . . . will see in [this law] evidence that the U.S. puts into practice its principles of democracy and self-determination...
Although the Mediterranean ("bluer than ever this year") drew its quota from the Paris office, Correspondent William Chapman chose to seclude himself in a rented room and terrace of an 11th Century tower on a river near Tours. Bureau Chief Charles Wertenbaker, en route to the Basque coast ("my favorite place in the world"), tarried in Spain for his favorite spectator sport, bullfighting, and was so moved that he turned out a report of what he saw for TIME (July...
JUDSON W. CHAPMAN...
...Hesitate? The test was pointedly addressed to U.A.W. Secretary-Treasurer George Addes; California C.I.O. man Philip Connelly; Ernest de Maio, a leader in the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America; Author-Correspondent Quentin Reynolds; Lawyer Bartley C. Crum; Hunter College Assistant Professor Emmanuel Chapman; Radio Commentator J. Raymond Walsh; T.W.U. President Michael J. Quill; Screen Writers' Guild President Emmet Lavery; Josephine Timms, secretary-treasurer of the American Communications Association. And, says the C.W.V., there are a few more to come...
...flock?" By last week, none of the people being quizzed had answered-bang! except George Addes. The C.W.V. did not publish Addes' answers, to which they had replied simply: "Your statement does not answer the questions." But some of the others had grumbled to the daily press. Chapman said that his opposition to Communism was well known, and that he considered the test "shameful." Said Reynolds: his personal religious life was "none of their business...