Search Details

Word: canalizes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Canal. German prisoners of war, crawling back from the Bolshevik wastes after World War I, brought with them legends of the escape of one of the Russian royal family. In 1920 the half-dead body of an unidentified young woman was dragged from a Berlin canal. She claimed in semi-delirium that she was Anastasia. Two years passed before even the girl herself, closeted in a mental hospital, could piece together a coherent story of how, aided by two brothers named Tchaikovsky, she had been carried out of the cellar and across Russia into Rumania. No Tchaikovsky ever showed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Anastasia | 2/11/1957 | See Source »

Everyone hopes that the current troubles add up only to a short-range problem. Barring political complications, the Suez Canal should be open for shallow-draft tanker traffic by March 1, will probably open completely by mid-May. Oilmen are also hopeful that the sabotaged Iraq Petroleum Co. pipeline traversing Syria from Iraq to the Mediterranean can soon handle 40% of its former capacity. But it may still take months before the flow of oil is back to normal. Even if the canal clearance proceeds on schedule-and the Egyptians do not decide to keep it closed after...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE OIL SHORTAGE | 2/11/1957 | See Source »

...bronze, bigger-than-life statue of Ferdinand de Lesseps. builder of the Suez Canal, stood for 60 years in Port Said. Last December, as Egyptian demonstrators celebrated the withdrawal of the Franco-British invasion force, they expressed their hatred of all things European by blowing up the statue. The great builder would have been neither surprised nor resentful. Irrational violence, betrayal and humiliation dogged him all his long life without dampening his boundless optimism or shaking his firm belief in the essential goodness of man and the basic harmony of nations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Giant Ditch Digger | 2/11/1957 | See Source »

...Syrians said they would start the Iraq Petroleum Co.'s big pipeline pumping again only when the Israelis cleared out of Egypt. The Egyptians said they would start talking about a Suez Canal settlement if the Israelis would pull their remaining troops back from the Gaza strip and from the Egyptian forts commanding the entrance to the Gulf of Aqaba. The Israelis said they would withdraw their troops if the U.N. would guarantee that Egypt would not use Gaza for a raiding base again and the forts as a strongpoint for blockading Israel's access to its port...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MIDDLE EAST: For an Early Closing | 2/4/1957 | See Source »

...fancy cooking of his wife, plain Jessie George, says Author Jean-Aubry in a very French aside, made things bearable. Isolated in his cottage in Kent, where he could sniff the sea, Conrad sometimes despaired of his writing (he thought of becoming a pearl fisherman or a Suez Canal pilot), but in the end his work was recognized for what it was?amid the sentimental afterglow of the Victorian Age, only he and Thomas Hardy spoke with the cold, severe voice of tragedy. In 1923 he traveled to the U.S. to see his publisher, whom he called Doubleday Effendi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Pole with British Tar | 2/4/1957 | See Source »

Previous | 560 | 561 | 562 | 563 | 564 | 565 | 566 | 567 | 568 | 569 | 570 | 571 | 572 | 573 | 574 | 575 | 576 | 577 | 578 | 579 | 580 | Next