Word: page
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Munich? Like so many family fights, it was over a silly issue-a three-page article in the Saturday Evening Post. Time was when the Post was known for homey cover pictures and short stories in which boy and girl always managed to meet, spat, resolve their differences and legally wed within 2,500 words. Now the Post goes in for hurry-up, behind-the-scenes exposés-such as last week's "In Time of Crisis," a panting account of the Cuban confrontation by Charles Bartlett, Washington correspondent for the Chattanooga Times, and Stewart Alsop, the Post...
...will go down with "such immortal phrases as 'Don't fire till you see the whites of their eyes.' " But the Post compensates for the lack of a surprise ending by hammering away at the villain. The Munich quote is bannered across the top of one page. Opposite is a full-page portrait of Adlai, chin in hand, looking like a man who is incapable of making up his Christmas list. "Stevenson was strong during the U.N. debate," reads the caption, "but inside the White House the hard-liners thought he was soft...
...Kremlin last week was also rapping the knuckles of Soviet writers. Pravda, in a front-page editorial complained that too many Russian authors had "betrayed" the cause of socialist realism in favor of "all-forgiving liberalism or rotten, sentimental complacency." These "pseudo innovators," argued the editorial, "idly pursue Western fashions, which are profoundly alien to our world outlook, to our esthetic sense, and to our concept of what is wonderful and beautiful...
...years ago, Snow returned to China to see Mao again and, as he reminds himself on nearly every page of his portly new book, his second visit was as much an achievement as his first. Reluctantly accredited by the State Department ("someone we feel cannot be objective") and enthusiastically accepted by the Peking government, Snow traveled 12,000 miles through New China, spent hours with Mao (the only American to interview him in ten years) and days with Chou Enlai. Just as time has not diminished Snow's zest for a story, neither have events darkened his view...
...there, of course, are those who want to learn all about the University, meet prominent people, and see their articles on the CRIMSON's front page. They of course will be news board types. The photo types? They will be there...