Word: appears
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Hadden's message to the 1,892 delegates was that much of this travel is inspired by news stories about people and places as well as scenic color spreads such as those that appear regularly in TIME. To prove his point, he tested the delegates with a panel of numbered pictures that had illustrated TIME stories. A surprising number of dele gates knew all the answers. Still there were skeptics...
...week long the cameramen of many nations pursued Dulles from conference to conference, determined to catch him and Molotov in friendly discussion. They tried at Molotov's villa after Dulles paid a visit, but no sooner did the lenses appear than Dulles, who was getting into his Cadillac, brusquely told the chauffeur to "get going." When U.S. photographers asked for the usual formal portrait of all the foreign ministers, the Secretary turned it down. He had a narrow escape at the British reception, but managed to get Harold Macmillan between him and Molotov before the shutters clicked...
There has been editorial attack on Yale's "fraternities," but the News spent much of its space explaining why it, too, served liquor to minors. Comments on national and international affairs appear infrequently, and are of the crudest armchair variety. One of them, written after the Eisenhower break in the Stock Market, predicted an oncoming United States depression with the profound conclusion that "It need not be pointed out that if this nation suffered another depression of serious proportions, it would lose considerable influence in its effort to woo the world to capitalism instead of communism...
Sheep never appear in this comedy, but Fernandel does, everywhere. In The Sheep Has Five Legs there is plentiful proof that the French are fertile and that Fernandel is versatile, for offspring abound, and all of them are Fernandel. Obviously designed solely to set off his virtuosity, the movie is merely a series of disconnected situations, which come off largely because of his personality and broadly smiling...
...would be valuable for students in some fields to study in Russia, he maintained. In history, literature, language, anthropology, and archaeology it would be "both feasible and profitable to study in Russia," he said. "Studies in the other social sciences, particularly economics and government, although useful, would not appear possible under present conditions," he added...