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Word: arrowing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Under normal circumstances, the engineman of the Pennsylvania Railroad's flyer Red Arrow has a clear track as his train roars through Philadelphia's famed Main Line suburbs on its run from Detroit. But as it came hurtling in toward the city at 7:30 one morning last week, complications developed up ahead; the Philadelphia-bound Pittsburgh Night Express-which was running 48 minutes late on the same track-had been stopped up ahead by a block signal near the station at Bryn Mawr...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DISASTER: Wreck of the Red Arrow | 5/28/1951 | See Source »

...tapered objects, 10 to 15 ft. long and 1 ft. or less in diameter. They are launched from a kind of gunmount. On their tails they have four fixed fins arranged at right angles to one another. These keep the missile stable in flight, like the feathers of an arrow. The control surfaces are four small, triangular, movable fins one-third of the way back from the missile's nose. They can steer the missile, roll it and even give it lift, like an airplane in flight. All the fins have supersonic shapes; they are made of solid metal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Birds of Mars | 5/21/1951 | See Source »

...Military Governor of the Philippines. He died dramatically of a heart attack while addressing a reunion of his old regiment in Milwaukee in 1912. Douglas MacArthur grew up at a succession of Army posts and, as a child at Fort Little Rock, was almost killed by an arrow during the last of the western Indian uprisings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: MACARTHUR'S CAREER | 4/23/1951 | See Source »

This went on, Merk explains, until the otter was so tired, he could barely dive, when all the Indians shot arrows at him. The fur pelt went to the man whose arrow lodged closest to the otter...

Author: By Laurence D. Savadove, | Title: Holcombe Will Combine Ivory Soap and Politics For Last Time in Goverment 1b Lecture Today | 3/22/1951 | See Source »

Writer-Director Delmer Daves, who pleaded the cause of the American Apache in Broken Arrow, treats the Polynesians with the same respect. He rigs the story with their courtship and marriage customs, their rituals, superstitions, taboos. A preface labels these details as authentic, and most of them look it. The picture's anthropological approach is thus novel and sophisticated. Unfortunately, the dramatic uses to which this research has been put frequently seem as conventional and naive as the old Dorothy Lamour adventures on enchanted Pacific isles. What saps the movie's authenticity even more, and drains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Mar. 19, 1951 | 3/19/1951 | See Source »

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