Word: employed
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...York Times (whose late great Managing Editor Carr Van Anda first brought Einstein to the attention of the general public) editorialized: "To employ the unnatural and illegal forces of civil disobedience, as Professor Einstein advises, is in this case to attack one evil with another. McCarthyism should be fought cleanly and openly, and it will certainly be defeated in the long run."* The tabloid New York Daily News considered the source: "The old sweetheart is a giant in his field of theoretical physics. But his political wisdom is that of a babe-in-arms. His latest antic in the political...
...Easy but Simple. "But it is we ourselves who must employ [these things] . . . simple men and women simply and mutually confederated for a time, a purpose, an end . . . The answer is very simple. I don't mean easy, but simple . . . The end does not even require that we dedicate ourselves from this moment on to be Joans of Arc with trumpets and banners and battle dust ... It can be done within . . . the normal life which everyone wants and everyone should have . . . Because it begins at home...
...Refused to permit U.S. companies to employ other than native executives...
...unification of Korea is an end to which the U.S. is committed." Then, in words that took in other Koreas, i.e., divided Germany and Austria, he added: "We remain determined to play our part in achieving the political union of all countries so divided . . ." But the U.S. would not "employ war as an instrument to accomplish the worldwide political settlements to which we are dedicated and which we believe to be just...
Steel & Water. The biggest and best known of the Delaware Valley's new projects is U.S. Steel's giant $450 million Fairless Works at Morrisville, Pa. (TIME, Dec. 12). Started two years ago and now 75% complete, the Fairless Works will soon employ 6,000 and turn out 1,800,000 tons of steel a year, almost 2% of U.S. production. Among the first to follow U.S. Steel to the area: its subsidiary, National Tube, with a $100 million plant. National Steel, fifth largest U.S. producer, has plans for a $300 million plant in Gloucester County...