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Word: dank (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...gets clapped into jail, loses a leg in an inept attempt to escape. Released and returned to England, he plays the Red hero and is lionized by the jackals of the party line. Most of them are arty fellow travelers from the Bloomsbury set, and their spirits are as dank as their cellar studio apartments. Black sheep sons of wealthy parents, ersatz painters and poets, they are all fighters with the mouth who like to play at social revolution between bouts of faddish chitchat and casual fornication...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fighters With the Mouth | 10/27/1952 | See Source »

...rose early one day last week and went down to Boston to become an American citizen. It was a dank, rainy day and the friend who drove me in was going to answer a traffic summons, but otherwise I suppose one could say the occasion was auspicious. At least I had the little card without which no one could be admitted to the ceremony...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Citizen Is Made | 2/21/1952 | See Source »

...that dank forest where the Orinoco is a turbulent but puny brook, numerous tributaries tumble through the Parima Mountains. By measuring the varying rates of flow of these mountain streams, Major Rísquez Iribarren's men determined what they are sure is the true path of the river. Their observations also located the source of the Orinoco at Lat. 2° 18 min. North, Long. 63° 15 min. West, a few miles to the west of where...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: River of Discoveries | 12/24/1951 | See Source »

...Wollweber and the German Communist movement grew up together. The son of a Silesian miner who was killed in World War I, he went to work as a stevedore in his teens. He joined the German Communist Party on the day it was formed, 32 years ago. In the dank darkness of the Communist underground, Wollweber's peculiar talents sprouted like mushrooms. He was shrewd and quick-minded, capable of great courage and matchless brutality, a man capable of believing himself when he snarled, as he often did to a wavering follower: "Death is easy." During World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: The Apparatus | 7/9/1951 | See Source »

...Harvard's role in leading the nation away from that sort of palliative. The deplorable signs visible on the MTA cars, "Take Your Problems to Church This Week--Millions Leave Them There," may be appropriate advice to give those unfortunates whose view of life is that of a dank period to be gotten over with as "sinlessly" as possible, rather than as a grand and inspiring challenge to the individual. We here at Harvard have learned to accept good and evil as inevitable and to regard with equal respect--if not affection--those who worship Reason, Christ, Jehovah, Socialism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pathetic Palliative | 5/7/1951 | See Source »

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