Word: chambersized
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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When he is in the mood for Yank-baiting, no one does it with more enthusiasm than Yank-admiring Lord Beaverbrook, 81, Canadian-born proprietor of the London Daily Express (circ. 4,250,000) and three other British papers. Beaverbrook's intermittent brand of anti-Americanism rests on the...
"What makes an anti-American?" inquired Chambers. "Envy, for one thing: a kind of meanness which resents the fact that any country should be bigger and richer than we are.
Chinese Tones. The Chinese Communists seemed ready to give a little, but not much, on specific issues of dispute with Moscow. They conceded that in underdeveloped countries Communist powers temporarily may cooperate with "bourgeois nationalists" who are actively trying to throw off imperialism. But such elements, said the document, are...
The possibility of a deal was suggested by stocky, wavy-haired Judge J. Cullen Ganey, who feared that otherwise the cases would drag on for years. In months of behind-the-scenes negotiations, often in Judge Ganey's chambers, both sides worked out a tentative agreement: the Government would...
By 1955, Glaser's bubble chambers were working fine. Physicists, it now appeared, had been waiting for just such a piece of apparatus. Every serious physics laboratory now has at least one bubble chamber. The biggest one, at Berkeley, is 72 inches long, filled with liquid hydrogen, and cost $2...