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Word: disgustfully (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Army. Meanwhile, the commission was told that Jersey City's Claremont Terminal was considered so juicy a prize after the Army took it over in the summer of 1951 that an underworld war was fought for rights to steal from it. (The Army abandoned the pier in disgust less than six months later.) A former longshoreman named Charles Strang testified how one Walter ("Wally the Shark") Marcinski boasted of having Mayor Kenny's "O.K." on the Claremont piers. Wally, said Strang. stole cases of tools from Army tanks. "They stole so much Army equipment that every longshoreman looked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NEW YORK: Nine Hundred & Forty Thieves | 12/29/1952 | See Source »

...soldiers who man it and the officers who command it see no purpose and no good in the kind of war they are fighting. Americans fighting abroad always want to be done with war and go home, but there is a special quality in our soldiers: disgust with the war they are waging now. It is the quality born of their knowledge that they are not expected to win. They are expected only to stand and hold, and perhaps to be killed or maimed in the process. They are expected to leave their line on occasion and walk through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: International: THE FIGHTING, WAITING EIGHTH ARMY | 12/22/1952 | See Source »

...after another illness, the musicologist moves into the town, Devil concentrates on life outside the walls. Now the assorted evils of everyday life in the world are seen in contrast to monkish goodness. Truly the devil rides outside, where spite, greed, hatred (and again & again sexual temptation) plague and disgust the hero...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Texas Gushers | 11/3/1952 | See Source »

Associated with these sincere Old Guarders in the new party, however, are elements of the pre-war America First movement. Reporters at the Republican Convention noted with disgust that the MacArthur demonstrations were led by former associates of Gerald L.K. Smith...

Author: By Milton S. Gwirtzman, | Title: Birth of a Party II | 10/3/1952 | See Source »

...their own; the French won't hear of it. ¶ In the Assembly last week, the Germans and Italians wanted to elect a German president. The French backed Paul-Henri Spaak. After a sharp skirmish, the job went to Belgium's Spaak, who last December quit in disgust as president of the Council of Europe's Assembly because, he said, it could only agree on "what could not be done...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EUROPE: Where Are the Elephants? | 9/22/1952 | See Source »

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