Word: knowed
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...place I haven't been to or thought of since the spring of 1946, but the other night memories of it, in a hurry, like returning memories always are, came rushing back. I was on the telephone, calling Radcliffe, listening to that old black busy signal that I know so well, when suddenly I remembered everything. In a flash, of course...
...ribs has always been a source of primitive pleasure to many American writers who never came within smelling distance of the Charles. But in this case the journalistic sneerers have poked deeper than the ribs. They have suggested that Harvard and much of the country no longer know how to use the English language...
Americans know too little about atomic energy. This was the conclusion reached by the speakers at the Graduate Forum on. "The Atom and the People" last night in the Littauer Lounge...
Sensational writing has taken the place of factual reporting and has distorted the public's opinion of the atom, Barth continued. Donald Michael, of the Graduate School of Social Relations, gave statistics from his poll conducted a year ago in Chicago to determine what the public know about atomic energy. A majority believed no defense was possible and that another war would come within 25 years. A small minority thought negotiation would be successful...
...United States and Great Britain have offered the French a seat on the council which will nominally supervise the trustees during the period before the Germans elect a government. This "concession' is practically an insult. The French see international control of the Ruhr going out of the window. They know that when the future German government takes over the industries--or leaves them in the hands of cartels--Germany will become the most powerful nation on the Continent, outside of Russia...