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Word: placidness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...come home from the inferno and find a placid bunch of people who don't even know there's a war on. No bombers flew over us in a storm of death, chums. No snipers lurked at the corner of 3rd and Market; no ack-ack batteries picked us off in our penthouses. But that isn't our fault. It's a tribute to you. You kept us safe and we appreciate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Oct. 2, 1944 | 10/2/1944 | See Source »

Grove Park Inn is one of 48 resort hotels-at Asheville, Miami, Lake Placid, Santa Barbara, etc.-now used as redistribution centers for soldiers returning from battle. Last week the Army got started on two more centers. For Negro troops, it took over the Hotel Pershing on the border of Chicago's Negro district, got ready to move into the Hotel Theresa in Harlem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Army & Navy - Pershing and Theresa | 10/2/1944 | See Source »

G.I.s returning from overseas duty began arriving at 35 hotels in Miami Beach, three others in Santa Barbara, Calif. Within a fortnight, others in Asheville, N.C., Lake Placid, N.Y. and Hot Springs, Ark. will be opened. (Total capacity: 17,-ooo-less than 1% of Army Ground Force and Service Force troops now overseas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Army & Navy - MORALE: Soft Beds and Hard Facts | 9/4/1944 | See Source »

...Placid Surface. Philadelphians general ly accepted the discomforts and irritations of the tie-up with Quakerlike placidity-and even with some good humor. Ration boards stayed open until late at night, issuing emergency gasoline rations to any A-card holder who promised to carry a earful with him. The Army & Navy pressed hundreds of jeeps and trucks into service to keep production going at the Army Ordnance Depot and the Navy Yard. But the Philadelphia transit system regularly carries 1,150,000 persons a day. Thousands had to walk, on days when the thermometer shot to 97 degrees...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trouble in Philadelphia | 8/14/1944 | See Source »

...Quiet, usually placid Edward Kennedy, A.P.'s Mediterranean chief, had crackled that this was "a censorship scandal ten times more important than suppression of [the] Patton incident, and if accepted by us can only lead to permanent Allied political censorship in Europe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Jumbo Censorship | 5/22/1944 | See Source »

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