Word: glads
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Milwaukee and Private Cecil A. Dies of Memphis. The two soldiers picked 170-lb. Sewell Avery up by his arms and thighs, carried him to the elevator. Mr. Avery refused to walk in; the soldiers picked him up again. In the elevator Sewell Avery said: "I'll be glad when this is over." On the main floor he again refused to budge. The soldiers hoisted him up, carried him past a handful of startled clerks in the lobby, and down the main steps. His grey hair unruffled, his blue suit coat buttoned, his hands folded benignly across his stomach...
Other spring sports easily accessible include sculling on the Charles (H. A. A. tickets are good for this), tennis behind Morgan, and golfing in the immediate vicinity. Concerning the latter, Lieutenant Montgomery will be glad to furnish further information about golf courses in the area. He feels that there are many more courses available at close hand for NSCS students than they might believe...
Congratulations on your Governor Saltonstall article (TIME, April 10). As a native of Boston and a long-time resident of the Bay State, I am glad to give testimony to the excellence of the Saltonstall regime. His outstanding administrative ability and political honesty are well-known to students of the science of government. Not so well-known is the sincerity and humility and quiet courage which has characterized his every action in public and private life. You have rendered a great public service in highlighting the attributes of Leverett Saltonstall for the benefit of the American people. Our country could...
...army is ... representative of the peasants, the workers, the artisans-in a word, the people of Yugoslavia. ... It is sometimes falsely believed that Tito brings progressive ideas to Yugoslavia. Ninety percent of Tito's Partisans are Communists. . . . They kill the most intelligent peasants. . . . Mihailovich is ... very glad about Soviet successes [but] Yugoslavs like their king...
When Guaragnella ranged the fish docks offering $40 a ton for soup-fin sharks that fishermen had been glad to sell to fish-meal grinders for $10, his competitors figured he had gone shark-shearing mad. But when his secret leaked out, the price soared to $1,500 a ton. By last year, the quantity of soup-fin livers had risen from 40,000 Ib. in 1937 to 1.4 million...