Word: makeing
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...Boyd's week begins calmly enough on Thursday and moves like a rising pressure gauge through a welter of pictures, photostats, magazine dummies, make-up forms and teletypesetter copy to a climax around 3 a.m. on Tuesday when he gets the final "We are ready to say goodnight" from the printing plants. By that time all of the editors' picture and production requirements have been settled to the best of Boyd's and his assistants' ability. They have probably combed the country to find the one right picture to illustrate some special story. They may have...
...moral issue of the clearest nature," he told 8,000 intent teachers and students jammed into the University of California's cavernous men's gymnasium-and another 2,000 who sprawled on the grass outside, listening to booming loudspeakers. "It cannot be evaded. Let us make no mistake about it." The West was now, and would always be, at odds with a philosophy which claimed "a monopoly of the knowledge of what was right and what was wrong for human beings . . . Yet it does not follow from this that the two systems, theirs and ours, cannot exist concurrently...
...Sign peace treaties with the defeated enemies of World War II, thus give Germany, Japan and Austria a chance to set up free governments, "untouched by tyranny." "Nor can we accept a settlement which would make [them] satellites of the Soviet Union. The experience in Hungary, Rumania and Bulgaria has been [a] . . . shocking betrayal of the solemn pledges by the wartime allies...
...people but feels himself remote from them, he recently confided to friends his fear that the average citizen was not willing to support the sacrifices he thought were required. "All affairs are a part of all people," Acheson told the World Affairs Council of Northern California last week. "Make everyone you know realize that. . . this isn't a job they have handed to me and that they can have a relaxed and amused attitude about...
...response of his California audiences astonished him. At each appearance, he won standing ovations that surprised and flustered him pleasurably. Back in Washington, he planned to make more personal appearances, several speeches over the air. He would need help. This week at Key West, Harry Truman finally rose to the defense of his besieged Secretary of State. Presidential Secretary Charlie Ross announced that "the President has complete confidence in the Secretary of State and believes he is running the Department admirably." Rumors that he might be replaced, added Ross, were "completely without foundation...