Word: sateveposter
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...Satevepost's cover for May 29, one William B. Sommerville of Lawrence, Kans. saw something that rang faint bells in his memory. What he saw was a lordly, rotund lady riveter named Rosie (see cut), ankles crossed, overalled knees relaxed, looking royally satisfied with herself and her bulging cheekful of ham sandwich. Mr. Sommerville took Rosie the Riveter to the public library. Memory's bells became a carillon when he turned up a reproduction of Michelangelo's Isaiah (see cut). Mr. Sommerville sent his find to the Kansas City Star, which made good-humored...
...formal art training he ever had-all, for his special abilities and purposes, that he ever needed. At 17 he was doing illustrations for St. Nicholas, Boys' Life, Youth's Companion. In 1916, just as he reached his majority, he also reached the cover of the Satevepost,* which has since kept his bank account and his popular standing green. For the Post he has done, to date, either 222 or 223 covers, he is not quite sure which. During World War I he had a Navy interlude as "third-class painter and varnisher...
...staff with plenty of experience. Feature Editor Staff Sergeant Douglas Borgstadt was formerly Post Scripts editor of the Satevepost. Picture Editor Staff Sergeant Leo Hofeller was picture editor of the Daily News and has had extensive experience with the Armored Forces. Art Director Staff Sergeant Arthur Weithas takes charge of layouts, and was an advertising layout are before...
...Eastern Front, Editors on the Western Front, Editors--. Now who will fill the flowing bowl and, more important, mother the Freshmen, he wondered. Who would discover the WAVES while they were still but ripples in the caves of Comstock? Who could smell out the wiles of the Satevepost soon enough to scoop PM? Who could squeeze out tears so well as Dan, describing the PBH mites waiting wetly for their mothers to finish defense work? Who would replace Hal and Roy in shoveling the track from Plympton Street...
...Below the top deck, Army-Navy relations have never been worse than they were last week, and they were bound to demand the immediate attention of General Marshall. What had touched off the latest upheaval was a series of Satevepost pieces by Admiral Thomas Charles Hart castigating the Army for its Pacific performance (TIME...