Word: revealed
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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TIME'S determination to tell the news, whenever it can, through people, is as strong as ever. "Human interest" is not only the most interesting kind of news, it is also the "truest," i.e., the nearest approach to the way events actually happen. In casual conversation, people sometimes reveal more about the news than in set speeches or ponderous books. Millions of words have been written in the past 15 years about the personality of Franklin Roosevelt. In March 1933, the week he was inaugurated President, TIME printed a brief quotation from his mother, Sara Delano Roosevelt. It summed...
...doctor's cleverness finally caused Janet to reveal that she had actually poisoned the wife and the picture closed on a more melodramatic note than does the story...
During the course of the competition, candidates may reveal their opinions on everything from the machinations of the Kremlin to those of University Hall. Furthermore the editorial board, far from being limited to austere and weighty expressions of thought, also provides the opportunity to write such features as the Playgoer, the Moviegoer, the Faculty Profile, and the Music...
...This editorial is the last in the first part of a series in which the Crimson is undertaking an examination of undergraduate life at Harvard. The editorials in the first part of the series have attempted to reveal the situation as it is, not to reach final conclusions nor to recommend changes. Later editorials will view the picture as a whole and take a definite stand on problems that have been raised, and the final part of the series will make definite recommendations...
Undergraduates ponder quite a bit before they pick a square card for a round girl. Miss Jones statistics reveal a clear split, within individual purchases, between Sentiment and Joke cards...