Word: columnized
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...bridge, the Germans had taken a town far to the rear. The enemy had evidently watched the regiment's advance the night before, had skillfully moved in behind it. Parts of an armored division and a motorized division, outnumbering the Americans, had sheared through the extended U.S. column, isolated the regiment's tank destroyers, most of its artillery and its reserves of food, water, gasoline, ammunition. The regiment's officers now remembered the old man at the crossroads trying to tell them something about the Germans...
About that character portrait of Westbrook Pegler opposite Joe Curran's in the August 30 issue of TIME and which Pegler's [newspaper] column . . . implies that you stole: can you tell us the story...
This week's issue of Yank has no editorial. A column, signed "Yank's Washington Bureau," cheers soldiers who buy war bonds...
Fiery, Fascist-hating Raul Damonte Taborda was really in a pickle last week. The man who as chairman of Argentina's "Dies Committee" exposed the Fascist fifth column in his country (TIME, Sept. 22, 1941), who later, as editor of the pro-Allied Critica, pounded the neutrality policy of the Castillo Government and its successor, was wanted by the police of President Pedro Ramirez and wanted badly. For a week he had not slept at home. Now, with an order out for his arrest, he had found temporary sanctuary in the Uruguayan embassy in Buenos Aires. How long...
...telephoned him, he declared, had since been confronted by their superiors with transcriptions of the conversations. The New York tabloid PM reported that Pearson's syndicator, United Features, had refused to allow him to reply to the President. PM published what it reported was a banned column, in which Pearson elaborated on the statements that had provoked the Presidential wrath...