Word: hauls
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...Brinker, 30, slowly struggled to the makeshift stage and began singing I've Got the Sun in the Morning. After that came some chatter ("Golly, you guys have been here a long time, haven't you?") and some more songs. The finale called for Jan to haul a bashful G.I. onstage and croon Love for Sale as she unbuttoned his shirt...
...haven for Red activists. A cacophony of student jeers, punctuated by sniper shots, greeted the police, but they quickly seized all key university buildings and began a search for arms and Reds, while a battalion of regular army troops threw a cordon around the campus. It was a rich haul: some 800 suspects, including the 15 leaders of the Communist youth organization and a number of wanted criminals, all of whom were jailed; a huge cache of machine guns, automatic rifles and hand grenades was uncovered...
...Detroit and Cleveland as well. HUB and a company called Altair Airlines, which begins Philadelphia-Albany service this week with interplant General Electric executives as its primary clientele, will become the 102nd and 103rd entries in the air-commuter industry, a fast-growing business that this year expects to haul no less than a million passengers between big and little U.S. cities...
Thus commuter lines have sprung up everywhere. Beginning service a year ago in Ames, Iowa, with two planes and eight employees, onetime B-26 Pilot Paul G. Delman has built his Commuter Airlines into a bustling business that today has a monthly haul of 3,500 passengers from such places as Ames and Sheboygan, Wis., to Chicago. Midstate Air Commuter Service in three years has built a profitable business linking the isolated paper-industry towns of Wisconsin to Chicago. Pilgrim Airlines of New London, Conn., which currently shuttles to Kennedy International Airport 74 times a week, in four years...
...taken by Swiss-born Photojournalist Schulthess and supplemented by even-handed essays from Author Edgar Snow, German Journalist Harry Hamm and Professor Emil Egli, is about as close as most Americans will get to China this year. The photos, like China itself, seem timeless: men and women straining to haul boats upriver against a driving current, bent-backed peasants at labor in the fields, students planting trees, Mongolian horsemen racing across the steppe. And everywhere, plump wide-eyed children...