Word: deeps
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...such a limited field that he had to accept, for the time being, second-class citizenship. But that time passed, and there is no longer any reason for the Negro to continue in the Washington pattern. The other matter is the failure of your investigators to discover the "Deep South." I could lead you there where you would not recognize it as what we like to call democratic America. But these are very small matters. The surprising balance of the estimate is refreshing and is a true picture. This article should help to focus the eyes of thinking people...
...half an hour after his brief swearing-in ceremony, Wilson walked with assurance into his vast, flag-draped Pentagon office looking out over the Potomac River. Sitting down behind a walnut desk that once belonged to General "Black Jack" Pershing, he stared around at the pale blue walls and deep blue leather furniture selected by the first Secretary of Defense, James V. Forrestal. Behind his special, direct-line White House telephone, the man from Detroit propped a framed motto which read, "Nulle Bastardo Carborundum"-assembly-line Latin for "Don't let the bastards wear you down." Then, draping...
Iron mining will yield Venezuela no such fabulous income as she gets from oil ($525 million last year). U.S. Steel thinks that the country will benefit mainly from 1) employment, a steady 3,000 after mining starts, 2) opening of the Orinoco to deep-sea ships, and 3) an investment expected to total $200 million, much of it spent in Venezuela...
Yale's move confirmed a report by the CRIMSON last week that Yale and Princeton would both reveal opposition to the NCAA's TV policy, following similar action by Harvard. In the same story, the CRIMSON said that there was "deep dissatisfaction with some of the NCAA policies among the Ivy League college heads...
...head of Colonel Percy Harrison Fawcett, the famed British explorer. What happened to him then? One guess is as good as another, and the Sunday supplements have made them all. Was he killed by a wild animal? No evidence of that. Is he still held captive in the deep interior by Indians who believe him a god? So one old Indian woman declared a score of years ago. Or was he really murdered by the Kalapalos chieftain who confessed the crime (TIME, April 16, 1951)? The bones said to be Fawcett's were later proved to be those...