Word: glads
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Late is better than never. I am very glad to see at last that a serious American magazine expresses what we "liberated nations," people of central and eastern Europe, were thinking since two years...
...only one-79-year-old Thomas E. Wilson, chairman of Wilson & Co., Inc.-was still alive. At the dinner, where New York's Governor Thomas E. Dewey spoke (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS), white-thatched Mr. Wilson cracked: "Perhaps I should not say that I am glad to be the only one left, but I will say that I am certainly happy to be here." There was a marked difference between most of Forbes's new "leaders" and "the crop of 1917. Then they were empire-builders such as Andrew Carnegie, James B. Duke, John D. Rockefeller. The leaders...
...these drinks and still the same only worse, not even happy. Another, dear! George-a fine party, George, am I glad we left that madhouse and came over here-how about two more with soda, George! Keep'em strong, strong, strong, and strong. Vag, Vag, come off it, boy it was only a game, wasn't it? Why let that rain the weekend, the Big Weekend, thought Vag. And then rush rush rush everyone out to dinner...
...inconvenient or too expensive, they will be doing themselves and their fellow automobilists a great disservice. For the University would be only too willing to abandon the lot in the face of apparent apathy towards its use, and the time will come when undergraduates will be only too glad...
Although the Authority had never run an airport, its reputation is such that New York City, five months ago, was glad to give it a lease on money-losing LaGuardia field and on New York International (Idlewild) field, which has proved a financial headache to the city. Last week, Newark turned over Newark Airport to the Authority on a rental basis that looked fine beside the $139,825 Newark had lost on its field last year. (Newark will get a minimum rental of $100,000 a year for 50 years...