Word: madnesses
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Dutch civilians were stolidly restrained. "They were as mad as hell. I have seen some of those fellows just raging mad. They just sit at home and wish that they could get going, but then they feel, 'What the hell? We can't do anything.' You are just absolutely bound." The Dutchmen were biding their time...
Most of them were Navy-trained, but all were plain mad at his undiplomatic handling. Result: only five A.V.G. men stayed on with the China Air Force. Many, priceless assets in the defense of an area that few airmen knew, went home...
From the cornfield constituency of self-styled "country boy" Alf Landon to the Capitol Hill offices of smooth politician Joe Martin, the anguished cry went up: "Power-mad bureaucrats." "Bossism." "No milk for Hottentots." All the threadbare, empty rhetoric, spouted in the name of the "American Way" by the same coterie who have, at the price of disunity, taken the public by its ears and dragged it away from the cesspool of a global war to get a whiff of the Administration's "sewer of bureaucracy." Visions of the 1944 election are crowding the nation's war and peace problems...
...mad hatter" Wagenfeld made his first public appearance without his hat last Friday, when he led the Labor Fellows in a strenuous game of basketball against the Nieman Fellows...
...Nieman Fellows are a group of journalistic students who were enticed away from their typewriters long enough to go down to the Indoor Athletic Building and scoop the labor men by a score of 28 to 20. Starring for the Union men were Ray Frisch another mad hatter, and "Two Way Stretch" Pfeffer from the International Ladies' Garment Workers Union. The outstanding players for the journalists were "Scooper" Ethridge, former college star, and "Copy...