Word: marlis
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...Mexico's Peter Hurd. A LIFE correspondent during World War II, Hurd has painted on all five continents, but the people and scenes he likes best to portray are the ranch folk, the sun-blazed desert and the bare mountains near his New Mexican ranch (TIME color page, Mar. 3, 1952). His precise tempera paintings of the U.S. Southwest and its people are owned by such leading museums as New York City's Metropolitan, Kansas City's William Rockhill Nelson and the National Gallery in Edinburgh. For Hurd, a classical-music fan, the Ellington assignment...
LUIS MUÑOZ MAR...
...past year. The articles on faculty promotion and tutorial, while poorly written, are good ideas. The feature on the theatre, best-written of all, is commendable for its vigorous criticism of the University--a refreshing trait in a publication traditionally noted for uncritical praise. A few spelling errors, however, mar the article, which both deteriorates in style and becomes redundant toward...
Blasier that first showed good sense -and agreed to the suggestions of a special, three-man fact-finding panel (TIME, Mar. 19). At this sign of apparent willingness to deal, the union held out another two weeks and got some further concessions on time studies and rehiring of fired strikers...
...purchase price), hit the industry where it hurt most-in the domestic market. In the immediate postwar drive for exports, Britain sent a flood of cars abroad. But when the government stopped allocating raw materials on the basis of exports in 1952, British automakers shifted to the easier home mar ket. In 1951 Britain turned out 475,919 cars, exported 366,622, but in 1955, when production had nearly doubled to 897,560, exports increased by only 24,183, or barely 6%. Moreover, only one in nine export cars is now earning sorely needed dollars from...