Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...know of publishers, honorable men, who cast out of their shop patently dishonest advertising, yet their front pages are a mass of dishonest eight-column streamers nearly every day. Some papers feel the compulsion to propagate their owner's social, political and economic ideas in their news columns, unaware that freedom should include freedom of news from color and distortion...
...Stalingrad tractor plant (and later had 100 of his 4,000 negatives confiscated). They came home convinced that the Soviets, who keep the permanent foreign correspondents cooped up in Moscow, have the world's worst sense of public relations. "The Embassy people and the [regular] correspondents feel alone, feel cut off, they are island people in the midst of Russia, and it is no wonder that they become lonely and bitter," Steinbeck wrote. "But if it had been part of our job to report news as they must, then ... we too could never have left Moscow...
...most incredible about Harvest of Years is not what happens, but how dull and derived it's all made to seem. Far from being lit up by any lightning flashes of imagination, the play catches hardly a fresh current of air. In how they think and feel-or how the author thinks they think and feels they feel-the Bromarks are not much more than walking bromides...
Harvard didn't feel up to it, and didn't see any good reason why it should. President Truman's Commission on Higher Education had recommended that U.S. colleges and universities double their student bodies by 1960. Harvard President James B. Conant told his Board of Overseers this week that Harvard (with 12,500 students) was too big already, and should cut back to its prewar...
...like the theatre work at Harvard," said Holabird in conclusion. "In a way there is more reward for overcoming the obstacles I have mentioned than if everything were easy and mechanical I do feel though, that the present situation is expensive, dangerous, and exceedingly wasteful for the students involved...