Word: honolulu
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...Dowling got a job as cub reporter on the Chicago Times. In 1941 a new paper, the Chicago Sun, was started, and Dowling joined the staff. The Pearl Harbor attack came three days after the paper began publishing, and Dowling was sent to Honolulu, a move that was to keep him hopping around the Pacific and the Far East for the next five years. This period included a year in Peking and a five-week stretch of detention under "house arrest" by the Russians during a trip into Manchuria to report on the movement of heavy industry to the Soviet...
...previous letter (TiME, Nov. 24) I told you something about your fellow readers of TIME in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Now we have had a chance to take a close look at the readers of TIME'S Pacific Edition, which is printed in Honolulu and Tokyo...
...bruises on him. Esperanza said that John also cursed her (she repeated some of his words in a whisper to the deadpan judge) and once doused her with rubbing alcohol. Well, snapped Wayne, Esperanza neglected her household duties. Esperanza then told how John had once returned from a Honolulu stag party with a stripteaser's "large black bite" on his neck. And after one studio party, he came home tight at dawn, smashed a door pane to get in, admitted he had dropped by the house of his costar, Gail (The Lawless) Russell. Countered Wayne: one whole week, when...
...order lessons 34 years ago. Since then, he and his wife, Kathryn, have expanded fast, opening up about 150 new studios in the last five years alone. In all, they have taught some 5,000,000 pupils; in the last twelve months Arthur Murray studios in the U.S., Bermuda, Honolulu, Mexico, Cuba and Canada grossed $32 million...
...battle began when a series of incidents made parents realize that something was radically wrong. One little boy confessed that he could not read the postcards his mother had sent him from Honolulu. A teen-age grocery clerk had to admit that he could not read handwritten orders. Another boy told his mother that he could not decipher his pen pal's letters. A little girl said she could not sign her name "because I can't do capitals." Last May six mothers and fathers finally formed a Parents' Research Committee to look into the matter further...