Word: convey
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...tung's boyhood village home in Hunan province. "As I visited the rooms where our beloved leader spent the years of his boyhood," he wrote, "I encountered many of his old acquaintances. Chou Pu-hsun, a schoolmate of Mao's, asked me to convey his regards, and said: 'How nice it would be if I could see Chairman Mao once again...
Exactly how the point is to be made a fact will be the continuing problem of the Administration and Congress. The general could only convey his own optimism. It was up to them to work out their detailed confusions. His job is to lead the NATO army, navy and air force, just beginning to emerge from the phantomlike phase of historical conferences and splendid promises into something actual-measured in fleets, squadrons and divisions, noisy with the clank of weapons and marching feet (see box). But it is an army existing only on paper until the governments give it weapons...
...Broad View. It is hard to overestimate Chato's impact on Brazilian public opinion. His columns and newscasts convey a burning hatred for Communism and a strong regard for the U.S. On issues nearer home, in recent weeks, he called upon the President-elect to "teach Brazilians how to work," denounced "cancerous bureaucrats" and urged exploration of Brazil's oil by foreign companies ("What good does our oil do a thousand feet under the ground...
Will you please convey to Sergeant Robert Ward's twice-bereaved Cherokee Indian mother my personal appreciation of her permitting his return to combat duty . . . Her heroic action honors herself, her son, her people and her nation...
...theater, and not simply to inflame the emotions; to ask whether absolutist ideas can exist without absolutist methods, whether life which systematically ignores the human factor can preserve a human form. As a play, Darkness at Noon manages, by means of flashbacks and a divided stage, to convey Rubashov's relations with various party members and inquisitors. What is chiefly lost in the theater is Rubashov's relations with himself. The story also slumps here & there, and the love elementthough politically pertinentoften has a familiar, rather bourgeois look...