Word: clamorings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...hundred heads were bowed, two hundred pencils making brisk, black marks in blue booklets: it was a typical examination day at Princeton. Suddenly from the back of the room came a growing clamor. Three young men were asking questions out loud about the test. They flagrantly pulled-out notes on the reading from their pockets...
Sizzling Barrels. In the lowering weather, there was no U.N. air support. The U.N.'s booming Long Tom 155s, 105-mm. howitzers and multiple heavy machine guns filled the valleys with their clamor. Gun barrels got so hot that they sizzled in the rain. Supply truck crews struggling through red-brown mud quickly dumped their shell loads at new gun positions and headed back for more...
Despite all the pitfalls of trade with Russia, the clamor for it by European businessmen who are being shut out of the U.S. market will probably increase. To lessen it, the U.S. will have to revise its list of strategic goods, try to eliminate all the borderline products whose export must be approved by a NATO-wide committee in Paris. If the list were more precise, a needless source of anti-American irritation would be removed, and more European businessmen could learn firsthand the Soviet shell game. But U.S., European and Japanese businessmen must keep in mind that the Communist...
...outraged clamor which the defense budget provoked, Dwight Eisenhower took to the radio and gave Engine Charlie what sounded like full public support. "The President is sticking with Wilson," reported an Administration spokesman. There were indications, however, that Ike's regard for his Defense Secretary had dwindled considerably since last January. Both at Cabinet meetings and at personal interviews with the President, Wilson tended to monopolize the conversation, devoting a good deal of his talk to problems that did not properly concern him, and often failing to make clear what he was trying to say about the Defense Department...
...illegally across the shallows of the Rio Grande into the U.S. But World War II brought labor shortages to California and Texas harvest fields, and in the years which followed, the wetbacks thronged in by the tens of thousands. The annual invasion has grown bigger & bigger-despite legislation, public clamor, the hardships which the wetbacks suffer, and the best efforts of the U.S. border patrol, which caught and shipped 635,135 of them home (many of them repeaters) during 1952 alone...