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George and Creel
He sharply criticized George Creel, whom the President appointed to head wartime propaganda efforts at the committee on Public Information.
* George Creel ( 1876 – 1953 ), American journalist, politician, and head of Committee on Public Information
George Creel
George Creel ( December 1, 1876 – October 2, 1953 ) was an investigative journalist, a politician, and, most famously, the head of the United States Committee on Public Information, a propaganda organization created by President Woodrow Wilson during World War I.
* George Creel, How We Advertised America ( NY: Harper & Brothers, 1920 ), Available from Internet Archive
et: George Creel
es: George Creel
Ray Stannard Baker, George Creel and Brand Whitlock were active at the state and local level, while Lincoln Steffens exposed political corruption in many large cities ; Ida Tarbell went after Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company.
Speaking on Four Minute Men, volunteers who rallied the public through short speeches, journalist George Creel stated that the idea was extremely popular and the program saw thousands of volunteers throughout the states.
* With Edwin Markham and George Creel, Children in Bondage, ( 1914 )
The committee consisted of George Creel ( chairman ) and as ex officio members the Secretaries of: State ( Robert Lansing ), War ( Newton D. Baker ), and the Navy ( Josephus Daniels ).
It was also represented in the liberal internationalism of Woodrow Wilson, George Creel, and H. G.
In order to sell the idea the war and draft was right in a disinterested populace, George Creel, a veteran of the newspaper industry, became the United States ' official war propagandist.

George and How
* In the novelization of the film Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, written by Peter George, an explanation is given that the title character, " Dr. Strangelove ", had been wounded, and these wounds had left him with only one hand, and wheelchair-bound, because of the bombings of Peenemünde while he worked there for Nazi Germany.
Former speechwriter for President George W. Bush, David Frum, in his 2000 book How We Got Here: The ' 70s, wrote that Moon had granted the Times editorial independence.
* " How A Kicker Works, June 1951, Popular Science by George W. Waltz Jr-one of the best basic articles on out board motors with lots of drawings and illustrations
Where Mathematics Comes From: How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics into Being ( hereinafter WMCF ) is a book by George Lakoff, a cognitive linguist, and Rafael E. Núñez, a psychologist.
( 1960 ), Frank Loesser's How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying ( 1962 ), Marvin Hamlisch, Ed Kleban, James Kirkwood, and Nicholas Dante's A Chorus Line ( 1976 ), Stephen Sondheim's and James Lapine's Sunday in the Park with George ( 1985 ), Jonathan Larson's Rent ( 1996 ), and Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt's Next to Normal ( 2010 ).
* Dinitia Smith, " How Curious George Escaped the Nazis ", New York Times, September 13, 2005.
Here are a few other commonly used heuristics, from George Pólya's 1945 book, How to Solve It:
Moral Politics: How Liberals and Conservatives Think is a 1996 book by cognitive linguist George Lakoff.
The first battalion would be made up of Able, Baker, Charlie, and Dog Companies, while the second would have Easy, Fox, George, and How Companies.
* Fire on the River, The Defense of the World ’ s Longest Covered Bridge and How It Changed the Battle of Gettysburg, George Sheldon.
How ' bout them Cowgirls by George Strait includes the line " I've crisscrossed down to Key Biscayne, and Chi-town via Bangor, Maine.
* Larry Nichols and George Mather, Discovering the Plain Truth: How the Worldwide Church of God Encountered the Gospel of Grace.
* " Oh How I Laugh When I Think How I Cried About You " w. Roy Turk & George Jessel, m. Willy White
* " You Taught Me How To Love You Now Teach Me To Forget " w. Jack Drislane & Alfred Bryan m. George W. Meyer
* How to Avoid a Collision by George Beck, Wolfram Demonstrations Project.
George Orwell and Tom Wintringham made especially extensive use of the term " blimps ", Orwell in his articles and Wintringham in his books How to Reform the Army and People's War, with exactly the above meaning in mind.
George Stoney's 1978 documentary How the Myth was Made, which is included in the special features of the DVD, relates that the Aran Islanders had not hunted sharks in this way for over fifty years at the time the film was made.
* The film How to Marry a Millionaire features the George Washington Bridge entering into Washington Heights when J. D.
In an effort to get the two to make amends to each other, George made a simple suggestion: " How about a hug?
* Kahin, George M. Intervention: How America Became Involved in Vietnam.
Hitchens was " bowled over " in his adolescence by Richard Llewellyn's How Green Was My Valley, Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon, Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment, R. H. Tawney's critique on Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, and the works of George Orwell.
How do I know you're not George Plimpton?
A member of the Milford Drama Department, Glass played the part of Captain George Brackett in their 1975 production of South Pacific, Lowe in their 1976 production of Damn Yankees, and Bud Frump in their 1977 production of How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying ; along with his involvement on stage, he was a member of the Thespian Society.
She has also appeared on other American Broadcasting Company ( ABC ) shows such as What About Brian, George Lopez, and October Road, as well as the 100th episode of the CBS sitcom How I Met Your Mother as a bartender and on the USA Network show Psych.

George and We
David Lloyd George adopted a programme at the 1929 general election entitled We Can Conquer Unemployment !, although by this stage the Liberals had declined to third-party status.
Other key traditional pop and jazz ballads include: " Body and Soul " by Johnny Green ; " Misty " by Erroll Garner ; " The Man I Love " by George Gershwin ; " My Funny Valentine " by Rodgers and Hart, " God Bless the Child " by Billie Holiday, " Ev ' ry Time We Say Goodbye " by Cole Porter, the instrumental ballad " Naima " by John Coltrane, " In a Sentimental Mood " by Duke Ellington and " Always " by Irving Berlin.
Other appearances include: John Hewson in The Soufflé Rises ( series 1 ); Pat Cash in The Desert Angel ; Cheryl Kernot in We Ain't Got Dames ( series 1 ); Bert Newton ; Amanda Keller and Anne Fulwood in This Night of Nights ( series 1 ); Glenn Ridge in Add Sex and Stir and Office Mole ( series 2 ); Glenn Robbins and Molly Meldrum in Add Sex and Stir, George Negus in Add Sex and Stir and Dick on the Line ( series 3 ) and Ian Baker-Finch in A Hole in the Heart.
Savoy dancer " Shorty " George Snowden stated that " We used to call the basic step the Hop long before Lindbergh did his hop across the Atlantic.
In Metaphors We Live By George Lakoff and Mark Johnson argue that metaphors are pervasive in everyday life, not just in language, but also in thought and action.
Former Secretary of State George Shultz commented on the evening, saying " We felt the ice of the Cold War crumbling.
Merrily We Roll Along ( 1981 ), with a book by George Furth, is one of Sondheim's more " traditional " scores and was thought to hold potential to generate some hit songs ( Frank Sinatra and Carly Simon each recorded a different song from the show ).
* Merrily We Roll Along ( 1981 ) ( book by George Furth ; directed by Hal Prince )
According to WRS, " We chose a selection of music for each of the various scenes and then George made the final selections.
George Howell wrote to Gladstone on 12 February: " There is one lesson to be learned from this Election, that is Organization ... We have lost not by a change of sentiment so much as by want of organised power ".
George Orwell believed that Aldous Huxley's Brave New World ( 1932 ) must be partly derived from We.
Through We, Yevgeny Zamyatin has directly inspired George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.
On September 30, Defense Secretary George Marshall sent an eyes-only message to MacArthur instructing MacArthur to escalate the war in Korea " We want you to feel unhampered tactically and strategically to proceed north of the 38th parallel.
As the war progressed, with no hope of joining the rebellion due to power of the Royal Navy ( in the letter he had addressed to Bermudians soliciting the theft of the gunpowder, George Washington had written We would not wish to in volve you in an Opposition, in which from your Situation, we should be unable to support you: -- We knew not therefore to what Extent to sollicit your Assistance in availing ourselves of this Supply ), with increasing numbers of Amercan loyalists in Bermuda ( such as the privateer Bridger Goodrich ), and with their economic opportunities dwindling, Bermudians overcame their sympathies for their erstwhile countrymen and unleashed their privateers ( which, by the middle of the 18th Century already outnumbered those of any of the mainland colonies ) upon American shipping.
Lloyd George was also helped by John Maynard Keynes to write We can Conquer Unemployment, setting out Keynesian economic policies to solve unemployment.
In April 1796, George wrote to Caroline, " We have unfortunately been oblig'd to acknowledge to each other that we cannot find happiness in our union.
* Metaphors We Live By by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, ( 1980 ).
Clemenceau said to Lloyd George in June: " We need a barrier behind which, in the years to come, our people can work in security to rebuild its ruins.
* Goot, Murray, " Contingent Inevitability: Reflections on the Prognosis for Republicanism " ( 1994 ) in George Winterton ( ed ), We, the People: Australian Republican Government ( 1994 ), pp 63 – 96
* Winterton, George ( ed ), We, the People: Australian Republican Government, Allen & Unwin ( 1994 ),
This idea, and a detailed examination of the underlying processes, was first extensively explored by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson in their work Metaphors We Live By.
In George Lakoff and Mark Johnson ’ s work, Metaphors We Live By ( 1980 ), we see how everyday language is filled with metaphors we may not always notice.
* Lakoff, George & Mark Johnson ( 1980 ) Metaphors We Live By.

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