Word: error
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...date set for mid-term examinations for courses in group XV is Saturday, Jan. 22, and that for group XVIII courses Saturday, Jan. 29. Owing to an error, those dates appeared incorrectly in yesterday's issue of the CRIMSON...
...suggestion that Red China be allowed to use the captive American fliers in question as a bargaining point in her relations with the United States. Insofar as the U.N. has decided that the fliers were not spies and have not been legitimately imprisoned, it would be a grave policy error to allow China to capitalize on an action that has been so condemned...
Favorable Battleground. Partnership protagonists in Washington expect to avoid the big error of the Marshall Plan-that of handing over U.S. aid on a government-to-government basis. As soon as the pumps are primed, partnership loans to governments would be quickly tapered off, and the building of dams and factories left to private capital, operating for profit. The partnership would also provide U.S. and European technicians, to teach Indians, Bolivians, Egyptians, how modern industry is run. U.S. experts believe that atomic-energy reactors might be used efficaciously to provide some of the power for industries in fuel-scarce areas...
Brisk Gallop. What little novelty and brightness was around last week was again supplied by the dramatic shows. On CBS's Climax, William Faulkner's An Error in Chemistry journeyed to storied Yoknapatawpha County for a study of a carnival confidence man as casually evil as a rattlesnake. Edmond O'Brien played the role with a fine malevolence, although the mistake that finally trapped him was both too forced and too trifling to support an hour show. Kraft TV Theater ambitiously tried Camille on NBC and Kitty Foyle on ABC. Signe Hasso coughed and swooned appropriately...
...Nobel Prize. I believe it might well have gone to Pound . . . I believe this would be a good year to release poets. There is a school of thought in America which, if encouraged far enough, could well believe that a man should be punished for the simple error against conformity of being a poet. Dante, by these standards, could well have spent his life in St. Elizabeth's Hospital for errors of judgment and of pride...