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ladjust
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There are 7 letters in LADJUST ( A1D2J8L1S1T1U1 )
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La Justice was a weekly New England French newspaper published by the LaJustice Publishing Company of Holyoke, Massachusetts from 1903 until 1964, with issues printed biweekly during its final 6 years. Throughout its history the newspaper reported local as well as syndicated international news in French, along with regular columns by its editorship discussing Franco-American identity. * In the early 20th century La Justice and its staff quickly became a cultural institution for Massachusetts Francophones, and at the end of the First World War longtime editor Joseph Lussier was among those invited by Governor McCall to join the state reception for the Commission for Relief in Belgium. Indeed Lussier was largely responsible for the growth of the paper, purchasing it in 1908, as editor he transformed it from a small political organ of the city's French into a widely-respected newspaper. For his work on the paper and dedication to the French language and culture, Lussier was awarded the Palmes Académiques, presented by the supreme secretary of the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society, on behalf of the French Consul General of New York Charles de Ferry de Fontnouvelle at the Valley Arena Gardens on January 14, 1934. Lussier would own and operate the paper for much of its existence, before ultimately selling it to one Jacques Ducharme in 1940.* Throughout its history the paper's writers regularly explored what the integration of Holyoke and Western Massachusetts' French Canadians into other American cultures meant for their own, their language, and role in the fabric of the greater community, with a regular column discussing Franco-American life in English appearing in the paper in its later years. |