Word: hansons
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...novel published by an American and dealing with American life. "The Skin of Our Teeth," Thornton Wilder's fantasy now running on Broadway, was given an award for "the American play, performed in New York, which represents in marked fashion the educational value and power of the stage." Hanson W. Baldwin of the New York Times, was designated at the year's most distinguished correspondent on the basis of his South Pacific report. Either Forbes' "Paul Revere and the World Be Lived In" earned the prize for the best book on the history of the nation...
Even able Hanson Baldwin, Times military analyst and perhaps the best in formed war writer in the U.S. today, in common with most experts predicted, soon after the German invasion of Russia, that the Nazis would win another quick victory...
...Newman's music . . . John S. Taylor spent most of the evening trying to get his coat back . . . Norm Bradley was making the music tingle eight to the bar. He hit more than one bar before the mid-night music closed the show . . . Ford Boyd, Ed Thomas, and C. B. Hanson held a huddle in the Statler lobby to figure out their next play . . . Last seen, they were calling signals for the Copley Plaza . . . Forman was the only C-V (X) in the Grand Suite enjoying the hospitality of the Eastern Airline Hostesses . . . Harold "Doc" Savage imported a date from Northampton...
...York Times's military commentator Hanson Baldwin suggested last month that military doctors could be stretched further by picking up surgical teams from nonfighting garrisons where they have little to do, rushing them by plane as needed to handle wounded in combat zones...
...widespread use of dissonance in jazz worries Dr. Hanson. Said he: "I hesitate to think of what the effect of music upon the next generation will be if the present school of 'hot jazz' continues to develop unabated. It should provide an increasing number of patients for [psychiatric] . . . hospitals, and it is, therefore, only poetic justice that musical therapeutics should develop at least to the point where music serves as an antidote for itself...