Word: angers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...emotion under examination, would have really done wonders for the film. In future, this is the direction that wide films should take. Carved decorations in the awkward borders, for one thing, would relieve actors of projecting emotion. Henceforth, when a pretty young friend of some producer wants to register anger, instead of furrowing her generally marble brow, she need only point, with languid grandeur, toward the appropriate mask. Her charm need not be destroyed by the necessity of acting. This could mean great things for the future of television...
...villain, he became the U.N.'s No. 1 crowd-puller. He brought a kind of energy to the staid U.N. and many delegates liked to cross swords with him, watch him flail the table with his fists, see the top of his head go pink with anger. Some diplomats had a certain sympathy for him, but Vishinsky never allowed sympathy to break through his guard, constantly embarrassed hosts and guests with personal attacks. "Lots of venal people dislike their work," said Britain's Soviet Specialist Edward Crankshaw. "Vishinsky was venal but happy." In the strange and somber matrix...
...White House and at the State Department, President Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles had trouble containing their anger. Dulles thought foreign policy should be re-examined constantly, but he knew of no emergency that called for a congressional investigation. At the President's direction, Press Secretary James Hagerty issued a pointed statement : "The President has always believed that any Senator has a right to differing opinions from his own. He has often told me and said so publicly that he believes we have one of the wisest, most courageous and most dedicated men in our history as Secretary...
...Eisenhower has adopted the mistaken standard of taking a Colonel and promoting him to a General," Mark DeWolfe Howe '28, professor of Law, pointed out. "He can't do anything to anger the Democrats, so he will have to pass over such top men as Dewey and Dulles...
...family law" is cynically wrapped in a pseudoreligious covering, citing the Fourth Commandment and Martin Luther's explanation of it ("We should fear and love God that we may not despise our parents or masters or provoke them to anger...