Word: died
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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This example of the fact that news stories do not necessarily die with yesterday's newspaper or last week's newsmagazine is repeated-in volume -every week here at TIME. Requests for reprint rights (TIME'S editorial material is copyrighted and can be reproduced only by permission) run into the hundreds and range from a desire to use a certain TIME story or stories as examples of good English prose in a forthcoming textbook on English composition (there are four such about to be published) to a college publication that is about to use our format...
...little man had sent his wife a lock of hair and a long fingernail clipping. This is the custom of Japanese who expect to die. Last week, under klieg lights that gleamed on his shaven head, Hideki Tojo smiled and nodded as sentence was passed upon...
...skies, newborn babies will be marked, on their bodies if male and on their faces if female." The other women nodded soberly. "Even if all the lights are out," said Juana Sanchez, "one hundred children will be born this year with harelips, two prominent men in the government will die, and two great plagues will sweep the world." A couple of women hastily crossed themselves...
...such action would fall miserably short of its goal in the long run. Israel would not wither and die. Instead, the new state would cast about for allies, and finding Soviet Russia eager to expand its sphere of influence, would accept Russian economic and military aid. With this rapprochement between Israel and the Soviet completed, American and British statesmen could congratulate themselves on moving their enemy some 800 miles closer to the Suez Canal...
...Democratic talk of stand-by price controls, an excess-profits tax, repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act, and demands for wage boosts from tough, confident unions backed by a labor-minded Administration (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS). But calmer businessmen recalled that it was a Democratic Congress which had let OPA die, that President Truman had approved the repeal of the wartime excess-profits tax in 1945, and that wage boosts were bound to come anyway, as long as business and profits were so good. In short, they hoped that the Democratic bark would be worse than Congress' bite...