Word: organizers
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...nobody else will take the trouble to try. Upstairs there is a housing office that will find a room for any service man stationed at Harvard, to say nothing of his wife. An officers' club is kept stocked with easy chairs and magazines; entertainment ranges from Paris to an organ...
...eastern frontier to be restored as of September, 1939. "Tass," Russia's official news agency, answered by charging Premier Sikorski and his refugee cabinet with the "imperialistic" desire to hold against their will the four million Russians put under Polish rule by a peace treaty of 1921. The Soviet organ also leveled an accusation at the Poles for their "Fascist-minded" pre-war government under Colonel Beck...
...staff of this newly founded organ consists of Hays Cross, George Boddiger, Charles Honig, Martin Worthy, Bill Seiniger, Jim Nolan, Louis Pollack, Richard D. Robinson, and Milbank Pillsbury...
...year-old son, Jean Lawrence, studies medicine at Columbia University, his 17-year-old daughter, Annizella, takes a voice course at the Juilliard School of Music. Cook has found time to complete a course in short-story writing, also contributes a monthly column to the International Musician (official organ of the American Federation of Musicians) on jazz piano technique...
...Governor Poletti had paroled 15 New York convicts, twelve of them on recommendation of New York's Parole Board. The other three, all convicted of labor-union terrorism, were freed without Parole Board recommendations. In New York City only the Daily Worker, Communist organ, carried the news. Other papers ignored it for ten days. The Worker carried another story, welcoming the labor terrorists back to the fold. Then the New York World-Telegram dug up the story, belatedly revealed that Poletti had not consulted the Parole Board. Things began to pop. The austere, thorough New York Times reported...