Word: raymonde
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...term, it will be without a Chief Justice." In Washington, where secret meetings with newsmen seldom stay secret long, every reporter soon knew that Brownell had leaked the story. Next day, after Ike had confirmed the news at his press conference, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch's veteran Raymond Brandt, longtime specialist in Supreme Court affairs, got to his feet. "Pete" Brandt had been refused an interview with Brownell a few days earlier. Pointing his pencil menacingly at Ike, Brandt asked: "Is it going to be the policy of this Administration to leak such important news to friendly newspapers...
Right now the biggest project over at the Center, is the study of the Soviet Social system, directed by two of the regular staffers, Dr. Alex Inkeles, and Dr. Raymond A. Bauer. Supported by the Air Force, it is a long range program designed for a better understanding of how the Soviet system works and particularly as a basis for firmer predictions on how the regime and its citizens will react to certain situations...
...attribute the force of the illusion to any single element is difficult. Certainly the screenplay is an achievement. Faithful to Raymond Radiguet's story of his adolescent affair with a young married woman, it nevertheless sharpens its poignancy. The sympathetic portrayal of the lovers' parents, seen only dimly in the book, greatly enriches the plot. But more important, the film strips the story of the irritating elements of the book: Radiguet's smug introspection and pride of exploit. Shifted into the character of the schoolboy, rather then coloring the whole account, the immaturity and egoism of the young lover appear...
Where's Raymond? (Thurs. 8:30 p.m., ABC). Premiere of the Ray Bolger Show...
With this misinformation, off to the club went Wright, where he located his man (whose name was Smith), picked up the last details of the story and wired the copy to Beshoar. Later the club's boss, Raymond I. Smith, a hard-bitten New Englander with a sharp eye for a fact, described the story (TIME, May 11) as "the only really accurate piece ever written about the place...