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...composer could write a song in a few minutes, recalled Wodehouse; he would jump up from poker games to scribble music. He liked to eat a hard-shelled crab at 2 a.m.. then write music the rest of the night. Early in his career, he worked on as many as six shows at once. Although he threw many songs away, he must have kept a sizable school of minnows along with Smoke Gets in Your Eyes and Ol' Man River...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Melodies in a Safe | 3/28/1960 | See Source »

Bill Hulet's technique on the hunt stems from years of studying the stomachs of his kills to discover the black bear's feeding habits (grass and fir buds in April, crab apples in October). "Some bears turn carnivorous just afore they go into hibernation and go after calves and chickens." says Hulet. "If I know what they're eating, I know where to find 'em." To corner them, Hulet uses half a dozen hounds of his own special mongrel breed: one-quarter pit bull, one-eighth Australian cattle dog, and the remainder Redbone or Walker...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Bear Hunter | 1/4/1960 | See Source »

...brine is The New Yorker's John Cheever. With his oft-repeated visions of suburbia under a lowering sky, the author is obviously following Faulkner's lead by creating a kind of Yoknapatawpha, Conn. The fact that there are no Snopeses and not even very much crab grass in the commuters' heaven adds wry emphasis to Cheever's reiterated question. "Is this all there is?" ask his characters, who have everything. In The Country Husband, the author's answer (yes) is given with great irony to a prosperous executive who lusts for his teen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Short & Sour | 12/28/1959 | See Source »

...Harvard College Observatory, found Russian astronomers equal to their U.S. colleagues in imagination and ability. Pulkovo Observatory at Leningrad, which has a scientific staff of 400, is particularly fine. The Russians have some excellent men in astrophysics-such as L. S. Shklovsky, who proved that the glow of the Crab Nebula is caused by high-speed electrons passing through the nebula's magnetic field-but top performers are not numerous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Scouting the Russians | 11/16/1959 | See Source »

...complained that he gets no royalties from his highly popular Russian editions. Sholokhov's rejoinder: he gets no money from the U.S. for his books either. Later, Author Sholokhov sounded off in Washington to some U.S. authors about Nobel Prize-declining Novelist Boris (Doctor Zhivago) Pasternak. "A hermit crab," sniffed Sholokhov. Pointing out that they had never met, he added: "A fact that is indifferent to me-but bad for Pasternak...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Oct. 5, 1959 | 10/5/1959 | See Source »

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