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  1. If you experience an issue with the delivery of your newspaper, you can report the following types of delivery issues from the previous seven days using self-service options available in your...

  2. Aug 6, 2015 · From "Dawn Over Zero". Beginning in April 1945, Mr. Laurence was secretly seconded by The Times to the War Department on the request of Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves , commander of the atomic bomb project. After that, even the publisher of the newspaper, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, knew nothing of Mr. Laurence’s whereabouts or activities.

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  4. The New York Times, the Daily News, and the New York Post were the subject of a strike in 1978, allowing emerging newspapers to leverage halted coverage. The Times deliberately avoided coverage of the AIDS epidemic, running its first front page article in May 1983.

  5. Jul 30, 1995 · In the summer of 1945, New York was a city riding a wave of triumph, even as the undertow of the future began to tug at its feet. It was a time of unbridled self-confidence. The city had ...

    • Fast Facts: Yalta Conference
    • Background
    • Agendas
    • Poland
    • Germany
    • Japan
    • Aftermath
    Conflict: World War II(1939-1945)
    Date:February 4-11, 1945
    Participants:
    Wartime Conferences:

    In early 1945, with World War II in Europe drawing to a close, Franklin Roosevelt (United States), Winston Churchill (Great Britain), and Joseph Stalin (USSR) agreed to meet to discuss war strategy and issues that would affect the postwar world. Dubbed the "Big Three," the Allied leaders had met previously in November 1943, at the Tehran Conference...

    Each leader came to Yalta with an agenda. Roosevelt desired Soviet military support against Japan following the defeat of Germany and Soviet participation in the United Nations, while Churchill was focused on securing free elections for Soviet-liberated countries in Eastern Europe. Counter to Churchill's desire, Stalin sought to build a Soviet sphe...

    Shortly after the meeting opened, Stalin took a firm stance on the issue of Poland, citing that twice in the previous thirty years it had been used as an invasion corridor by the Germans. Furthermore, he stated that the Soviet Unionwould not return the land annexed from Poland in 1939, and that the nation could be compensated with land taken from G...

    In regard to Germany, it was decided that the defeated nation would be divided into three zones of occupation, one for each of the Allies, with a similar plan for the city of Berlin. While Roosevelt and Churchill advocated for a fourth zone for the French, Stalin would only acquiesce if the territory was taken from the American and British zones. A...

    Pressing on the issue of Japan, Roosevelt secured a promise from Stalin to enter the conflict ninety days after the defeat of Germany. In return for Soviet military support, Stalin demanded and received American diplomatic recognition of Mongolian independence from Nationalist China. Caving on this point, Roosevelt hoped to deal with the Soviets th...

    As Stalin reneged on promises concerning Eastern Europe, perception of Yalta changed and Roosevelt was blamed for effectively ceding Eastern Europe to the Soviets. While his poor health may have affected his judgment, Roosevelt was able to secure some concessions from Stalin during the meeting. Despite this, many came to view the meeting as a sello...

  6. Nov 13, 2009 · Meeting in the city of Yalta in the Russian Crimean from February 4 to 11, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin each arrived with their own agendas for the conference. For Stalin, postwar economic ...

  7. Delivery times are unable to be changed. You can report a newspaper delivery issue in your Account that has happened within the last seven days. Paper location. In most cases, your...

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