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Once again the paper contained five columns and Bodoni head-line type. These changes coupled with more progressive make-up and traditional eye-appealing, candidate-killing parallelogram head-lines restored the CRIMSON to its intermediate position between the Gutenberg Bible and the Yalie Daily in printing pulchritude...

Author: By Richard A. Burgheim, | Title: The Crime---Action and Achievement | 1/8/1953 | See Source »

Staid Adolfo Ruiz Cortines, 61, is a new kind of President; he is neither a general nor a lawyer, but a bureaucrat. His nickname is Cara de Calavera, or Skullface; though he looks like Actor Boris Karloff, in his make-up there is a little Milquetoast: in movies, he obeys no-smoking rules even when everyone around him is puffing away. His favorite pastime is dominoes, though he also likes to watch baseball and stroll to street-corner stands to sip tamarind juice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEXICO: Decorous President | 12/8/1952 | See Source »

...legal brief, due for debate in the 60-nation General Assembly, was enhanced by the international make-up of its composers. The three: William DeWitt Mitchell of the U.S., attorney general under President Hoover; Sir Edwin Herbert of Great Britain, prominent London lawyer and wartime director of telegraph and postal censorship; Paul Veldekens of Belgium, law professor and president of the Belgian Supreme Court Defense Lawyers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNITED NATIONS: Expert Advice | 12/8/1952 | See Source »

...presidency) beset him: his voice was flat; he looked like an old man on TV because his light hair and eyebrows did not show up, giving an impression of blankness; his rimless glasses registered as two blobs of light on the TV screen. Reluctantly he submitted to make-up for TV performances. (An Eisenhower staffer found a make-up man who had been a paratrooper; this reassured Ike, whose tables of organization had never before included a male beautician.) He discarded his glasses and exchanged them for a dark-rimmed pair, which he began to use as a prop during...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REPUBLICANS: Man of Experience | 11/3/1952 | See Source »

...sometimes thought his children were going off their trolleys, too. But in the end, even Pa had to admit that the Loves-not, of course, excluding himself-had done well. His two daughters were grown up and married; his four sons were thriving. One of them, son George, a make-up editor at TIME, wrote out his account of it all strictly for family eyes. Later he showed it to his neighbor, Ernest Havemann of LIFE, and I Never Thought We'd Make It is the result...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Up the Irish! | 10/27/1952 | See Source »

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