Word: coauthored
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...fact of slavery in the Soviet Union is not news; its literature is extensive.*Author Dallin (CoAuthor Nicolaevsky contributed only one chapter to this book) lists a bibliography of ten packed pages on the subject, including Vladimir Tchernavin's unforgettable I Speak for the Silent Prisoners of the Soviet (Hale, Cushman & Flint, Boston, 1935). But until now, most of the slave-camp exposes consisted of narratives of personal experience and scattered corroboration drawn from between-the-lines interpretations of official documents. What Author Dallin has done is to bring all of this material together in a thoroughly documented volume...
...longer but get grey earlier, have bigger feet, eat less but do more heavy drinking, are less prudish, less weepy and less moral, marry earlier, cook better meals but make poorer mothers, are much less satisfied "with their lot as women." Independently, Dr. Marynia F. Farnham, Manhattan psychiatrist and coauthor of Modern Woman: The Lost Sex, proclaimed that U.S. women are the unhappiest in the world...
Died. Charles Bernard Nordhoff, 60, coauthor, with James Norman Hall,* 59, of Mutiny on the Bounty, Men Against the Sea, and other South Seas adventure novels; of a heart attack; in Santa Barbara, Calif. Nordhoff & Hall met a few weeks after World War I, formed a writing partnership, later moved to Tahiti-where Nordhoff married a native, by whom he had six children before their divorce...
...William F. Petersen, professor of pathology at Illinois University and coauthor of The Patient and the Weather, offered a medical reason for spring fever: "In northern regions, the low ebb of vitality is reached in March and April. Blood pressure is low, blood vessels are tired. Winter has left . . . the body's store of blood proteins, vitamins and the rare minerals...
Splashed across Page Two in the Sunday Mirror was what was billed as "the first of four intimate articles" on President Truman, sympathetically 'slanted by I.N.S. Correspondent Bob Considine (coauthor of Thirty Seconds over Tokyo). How was Harry Truman doing after nine months? Pretty well, said Considine...