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Word: angriest (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Aside from Cuba's predictable rage, the angriest reaction to the decisions taken at Punta del Este last week came not from the left but from the right. Returning home from the 21-nation conference at the Uruguayan seaside resort, the foreign ministers of the nations that had been willing to talk but not vote against Castro heard from some bitterly disappointed elements of their press and public...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Argentina: Look Left, Look Right | 2/9/1962 | See Source »

...surely Aziz, whose moods flow like water, who desires to please his friends even at the price of lying, who lives closer to his feelings than ever the British can, whose corroding fear that he has no dignity almost ruins him and provides Forster with his subtlest and angriest plea against the subjection of a race...

Author: By Joseph L. Fratherstone, | Title: A Passage to India | 1/15/1962 | See Source »

...extraordinarily gentle and soft-spoken person, Gropper seemed the angriest of men on canvas. His paunchy bosses, downtrodden workers and wounded soldiers not only parroted the party line and mirrored the headlines but were a staple of the artistic diet. After World War II, taste in art changed, and to look at a Gropper painting became rather like rereading Grapes of Wrath. American art became less interested in humanity, downtrodden or otherwise, than in art for its own sake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Durable Rebel | 12/8/1961 | See Source »

Died. Sir Victor Sassoon, 79, monocled Rothschild of the Orient and owner of one of Britain's finest racing stables; of a heart attack; at Cable Beach, Nassau. Financial chief of a famed British banking clan-and cousin to World War I's angriest young man, Poet Siegfried Sassoon-Sir Victor parlayed a fortune originally built in the opium trade into ownership of much of prewar Shanghai...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Aug. 25, 1961 | 8/25/1961 | See Source »

When British Playwright John Osborne first looked back in anger, he scarcely turned his head; now he has sighted back some 4½ centuries-to the angriest young man of 1517. Osborne's newest play, Luther, attempts to present the father of Protestantism as a kind of Jimmy Porter of the Reformation. Starring Actor Albert (Saturday Night and Sunday Morning) Finney, the play opened this week in Nottingham, a British tryout town, will spend the summer in "off-Broadway" London and on tour, including the Edinburgh Festival and Paris' Théâtre des Nations (see below). Like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater Abroad: Angry Young Luther | 6/30/1961 | See Source »

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