Word: detailing
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...protests of Congressmen against the expansion planned by the armed forces still popped and sizzled like a bunch of wet firecrackers. This week the U.S. public heard the other side in some detail. The case of the Army and Navy for a combined force of 11,100,000 armed men (and women auxiliaries) by the end of 1944 was presented in a report to Congress by 75-year-old Senator Theodore Francis Green of Rhode Island...
Figuring out these backgrounds-like practically every TIME operation -is a job for group journalism. Editor-in-Chief, Managing Editor, Picture Editor and department head all lend a hand. The research staff often spends hours checking the authenticity of a single detail. And the actual work of painting a TIME cover is so exacting that we need three top-flight artists to keep up with our requirements-Ernest Hamlin Baker, Boris Artzybasheff, and Boris Chaliapin (son of the Metropolitan basso). All these painters have such interesting stories that some week soon I will try to tell you about each...
...artist was a New Englander who painted portraits for 75 years and died in 1900 at the age of 95. His huge tribute to his country (9 ft. 3 in. by 13 ft. 1 in.) showed in realistic detail an edifice far beyond even Hollywood's most incredible fabrics. He also did a Garden of Eden Without Eve, filled with fauna, flora and far perspectives, which the Springfield (Mass.) Republican called "on a par with the extraordinary work of the French 19th-Century genius Rousseau. There can, of course, be no influence one from the other, but there...
...Come on, you mortar men, rise and shine," he says softly, before reveille. The ensuing scramble is pure bedlam, because the last two men of the platoon to answer roll call get the "yardbird" detail. When the Marines sailed for the Solomons, officers debated whether to take ancient Lou Diamond overseas. Lou bellowed orders to his platoon so boisterously that he sounded like all the sergeants in the Corps. He went along...
...Crimson has been a big help to all of the Army ROTC students as well as to the Military Science Department by publishing promptly and in considerable detail many of the decisions of the War Department that were of tremendous importance to the students. Matters pertaining to enlistment in the Enlisted Reserve Corps, to the modifications in the ROTC program, and to the college training program, were published for the students and others concerned therein at an early date and were in many cases the only means the students had of getting this information of vital interest to them...