Word: baruchly
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...vote, first taken on an atomic plan since the commission took up the problem last June 14, represented a partial victory for American delegate Bernard M. Baruch, who had persistently demanded a yes-or-no ballot on his far-reaching proposal...
...Baruch finally yielded and agreed to a Canadian compromise which provided for acceptance in principle and called upon a working committee to make the wording conform to the arms reduction resolution recently passed by the General Assembly...
Because his plan for the control of atomic energy is civilization's only hope-because in a world sadly lacking in great men he stands with the few-Bernard Baruch is Man of the Year...
...Pass. Since atoms were being discussed outside the Atomic Energy Commission, Chairman Alexandre Parodi called an A.E.C. meeting to protect its prerogatives. Bernard Baruch of the U.S. summarized the A.E.C.'s findings to date, repeated the proposals which he had been making all along. For reasons entirely outside the A.E.C. negotiations (possibly including lack of progress in Russian laboratories), the U.S.S.R. was now making the sort of concession that Mr. Baruch had been stubbornly demanding. But the Russians last week were bypassing Baruch, whom they still attack bitterly. Pravda recently printed a cartoon showing the silver-haired elder statesman...
Recently sensation-loving Lord Beaverbrook's London Daily Express aired the report that Britain had asked for bombs. Last week, in the U.S., conscientious Columnist Marquis W. Childs aired It further. Childs told how Bernard Baruch, chief U.S. atomic negotiator in the U.N., had been at great pains first to assure himself that there were no A-bombs in Britain, then to assure Russia's Andrei Gromyko of that same fact. Gromyko, at first dubious, came to believe Baruch...