Word: truman
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Kelly said. “They know you are smart, they know you are an expert in a field, they know you are passionate, but they want you to step outside of your experiences to see how you think.” Although Kelly also received the Truman Scholarship in 2004—a prestigious public-service fellowship awarded to college juniors—the news of the Rhodes still came as surprise to his family, he said. “[My family] didn’t even believe me at first. I called my mom as she was walking...
...weekend magazine. In Wright, the publisher found a battle-hardened veteran of the magazine world with 11 books already under his belt. In the early 1960s, Wright, recently graduated from a famous New Haven, Conn. safety school, worked as an editor at Holiday Magazine, whose list of contributors included Truman Capote. Wright once rewrote a story on time zones under the byline of Ian Fleming after the submission of the 007 creator didn’t stack up to Holiday’s standards.Wright left Holiday in 1965 to manage a theater festival in Spoleto, Italy. He then served briefly...
Directed by Bennett MillerSony Pictures Classics4 StarsThe Harvard-immersed filmgoer should be uniquely equipped to appreciate the pathos of Bennett Miller’s new film, “Capote,” chronicling the time Truman Capote spent researching and writing his novel “In Cold Blood.” Haven’t we all encountered at least one remarkably talented but socially stunted genius like Capote? And what undergrad worth his Literature and Arts A requirement is not interested in a deconstruction of the literary process?If that weren’t enough, Miller directs...
...left hand resting on an inexpensive Gideon Bible, Harry S Truman took the presidential oath of office on April 12, 1945. It was an extra 13 days before he received his first substantial briefing on the U.S. effort to develop an atomic weapon--a process fast approaching its climactic stage after more than three years of colossal expense, toil and urgency. Neither Secretary of War Henry Stimson nor Leslie Groves, overseer of the vast atomic project, was in a particular hurry to get the new President's ear because they knew that all the important choices about the Bomb...
...discomforting truth is that Allied leaders strode unhesitantly into the atomic age. "I regarded the bomb as a military weapon and never had any doubt that it should be used," Truman later wrote. "[N]or did I ever hear the slightest suggestion that we should do otherwise," Winston Churchill added. Nothing in the record contradicts them. Dropping the Bomb on Aug. 6, 1945, was among history's most notorious foregone conclusions...