Word: warmly
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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That night, the Senator went on the air over Mutual Broadcasting's Meet the Press, again gave Harry Truman a warm pat on the back. After the program there was a telephone call for Senator Pepper. From the other end of the wire a familiar Missouri voice spoke. The President wanted to thank Pepper for the nice things he had said. The program had come in very clearly, he added, and was very animated...
...house. Last February, the Metropolitan gave her three hours' warning that she was to sing Cio-Cio-San in Madame Butterfly on the radio. She had never sung the role before and she had had no rehearsal. But fast study, plenty of self-assurance and a big, warm voice carried her through...
...radar installations. Captain Illingworth welcomes them, but he does not deputize even to radar his task of watching the sea. "In the North Atlantic trade we have a saying: 'We blow the fog horn for five hot-weather months and blow on our fingers to keep warm the other seven.' When fogs abound, any captain of a ship like this who doesn't watch the sea himself is a fool, sir, a fool...
Wiser, some sadder, and a few disillusioned, a hundred young women in the Radcliffe summer secretarial and publishing courses not only pack up shorthand notebooks for the last time at Longfellow Hall today, but also mixed impressions of the Harvard male on warm weather prowl...
...Freudian psychiatry a natural enemy of Roman Catholicism? The question was still warm last week, thanks to the set-to between Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen and Psychiatrist Frank J. Curran (TIME, July 28). Not likely to quench the flames of controversy was an article in the Catholic weekly Commonweal by Catholic Psychologist Dr. Harry McNeill, prewar teacher at Fordham University, now a clinical psychologist in the Veterans Administration. Gist of the article: the Church has much to learn from Freud-and vice versa. Excerpts...