Word: meyers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Eliot Reed, Godin, Morris Gray, George Russell Harding, Jr., Paul Hart, Howard Thomas Healy, John Leslie Hoffman, Colin Alexander Houston, Willard Peele Hunnewell, Marshall Sheldon Katze, Paul Dudley Lamson, Jr., Burton Ralph Lewkowitz, Caleb Loring, Jr., Gerald Callan McCarthy, Robert Edwin McNair, David Martin, William McLeod Mayger, Robert Evan Meyer, Berkeley Davis More, Maurice Tirso Obregon...
Thomas Theodore Hoffman, Alexander Louis Jackson, 3d., John Pressly Kennedy, Jr., Joseph Anthony King, Jr., Robert Fulton Kurtz, Elliott Charles Lasser, Truman Saul Licht, Russell Frank Locke, Jr., James Logan, Jr., Henry Hixon Meyer, Jr., Clarence Fahnestock Michalis, Ernest Albert Mitchell, John Acton Morgan, Roland Ernest Mueser, Sean Buller Murphy, Henry Norris Platt, Jr., Alfred Howard Renshaw, Walter Barnwell Saunders, Dorraine Ward Slingerland, William Edward Smith, Arthur Sumner Tarlow, Richard Lawrence Wechsler, Edward Tubbs Wentworth, Jh., Walter Chadbourne Wilson, Jr., Benjamin Tappan Wright...
...civic nostrils of this ex-newspaperwoman widened when recently she began to hear from such friends as U.S. Surgeon General Thomas Parran about appalling housing and sanitation conditions and increases in venereal disease and delinquency in war-plant areas and military towns. Mrs. Meyer began to sniff printer's ink again...
...article Reporter Meyer let fly with a warmhearted woman's words when she saw prostitutes in one war center parading in their wrappers. She reported talking to the young wife of an army officer who was forced to pay $50 a month rent for quarters next door to prostitutes, quarters from which Negroes had been evicted so that higher rents could be charged. From Beaumont, Tex. she wrote that the stink from the city's garbage dump "is so vile over the Pennsylvania yards that the whole shift has to be pulled off the ships, causing the loss...
Even Post staffers, whose stories are boiled to the bone to save space, while Mrs. Meyer's run on & on, admit that her reporting is good. So do army officials, who hope that her exposé will get results and that she will write some more. She probably will...