Word: cols
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...entirely personal matter. But he did plan to see Winston Churchill again. And soon. He smiled and spelled out soon. A reporter asked him about the biggest dope-story of the week: that he favored compulsory peacetime conscription. The President leaned back, talked thoughtfully about American youth (see col. 3). Jovially he suggested that the reporters near his desk could use some exercise themselves. He was chuckling as the conference ended...
Soon there might be peace with Finland (see col. 2). Finland would remain independent. For Finland, stripped of a strategic Petsamo and Hango, would be harmless, lying like a baby between the paws of a bear...
Perhaps there would be another of those parliamentary democracies in Germany. Communists would be very strong in it, too, for only Russia had a realistic policy toward defeated Germany (see col. 3). The hard fact about the German question was that whoever dominated Germany, dominated Europe...
Chapin, and she held her own with col leagues like Irvin S. Cobb. But small-town journalism was in her blood. She went back to Quitman, married the Free Press's Editor Royal Daniel,* took up the fight for tolerance and decency and such progressive steps as the removal of hitching-racks from Quitman's streets...
Exactly one month after Dunster House was officially closed to civilians, 200 Army Air Force officers will arrive Monday to make it their home during eight weeks of study under the War Adjustment Program. The new school is directly under the command of Lt. Col. John F. Heflin of the Statistical School, but otherwise the two schools are entirely separate...