Word: missing
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Committee's purpose is to compile and distribute reports on the disarmament problem and sponsor speakers representing all opinions on the subject, Miss Mirin said. the organization will be divided into subcommittees to study various aspects of disarmament...
...Negley (Way of a Transgressor) Farson, John (Hiroshima) Hersey or Vincent (Personal History) Sheean. Yet none matches him for sheer scope, reportorial zest, or, most notably, the gift of popularizing remote places and difficult subjects. Says Critic Clifton Fadiman: "Gunther is a born teacher; he doesn't miss a fact-trick. His books are almost too easy to read; because of that, they seem superficial. But he's taught us a hell of a lot about our world, in primer terms. He's drawn the maps for us. He did for us what H. G. Wells...
With due respect to the abilities of both actresses, they could hardly miss. As written, the part has plenty of red blood in it, and it is colored up still further by the fact that Actress Strasberg, with girlish charm and intensity, opens her veins into almost every line...
...known producer (Henry Fonda) walks in, and she gives him the old cold cream. "I reverence the things you've done in the theater, Mr. Easton ... I read La Dame Souriante in French, and I admire your courage in doing it." Easton (edging away): "I'm sorry. Miss Lovelace, but we are fully cast." But a minute later she bursts into his office to say, "Thank you for taking such a personal interest," and while she's at it, she takes time to bestow her condescension on a famed actress (Joan Greenwood) who happens to be there...
Pocket Veto. In Jackson, Miss., as a bill to clamp down on professional shoplifters was in transit between the House and the Senate, someone made off with...