Word: pyle
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Puzzled by the "astonishing number of Axis sympathizers in North Africa," peripatetic Ernie Pyle reported to Scripps-Howard newspapers that the U.S. occupying forces were arresting only "the most out-&-out Axis agents" and allowing Fascist societies to continue operations...
Pace, W. A.; Parrott, L. M., Jr.; Peabody, J. G.; Peterkin, J. E.; Pettingell, W. H.; Pierce, J. B., Jr.; Pink, J. W., Jr.; Purdy, E. R. Pyle...
Divorced. By Scripps-Howard Columnist Ernie Pyle: Geraldine Siebolds Pyle, referred to in many of his columns as "that girl"; after 16 years; in Albuquerque...
Miss Fenner recommends as "good books to read aloud in family groups": Hugh Lofting's Story of Doctor Dolittle, Margery Bianco's Street of Little Shops, Walter Brooks's To and Again, Kenneth Grahame's Wind in the Willows, Howard Pyle's Robin Hood and Wonder Clock, Arthur Chrisman's Shen of the Sea, Stephen Benét's Book of Americans...
Technically, the West Coast had done well in its blackouts. Reporter Ernie Pyle, veteran of many a London raid, climbed the hills of San Francisco, said it was blacker than London. London permitted traffic, inside lights, hooded street lights; on the West Coast no lights inside or outside were permitted, cars were halted. "The city might be the dusty remnants of a city dead and uninhabited for a hundred years." The West was learning that it could do what was necessary for "defense," learning too that defense was not enough...