Search Details

Word: feeling (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...issue of TIME, you ran an article based on Senator Tobey's recent Textron report. As you state in your article, Tobey certainly had been "gunning for" me, and, as a result, I feel his one-man investigation was completely biased and his report in many respects inaccurate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Apr. 11, 1949 | 4/11/1949 | See Source »

...arrested for stealing a car, he learned safecracking from a fellow convict during a seven-year stretch in the New Mexico State Penitentiary in Santa Fe. Parry had stolen around $250,000 in his career, he bragged, and he had pulled 250 jobs. He didn't feel he had been greedy. Said he: "You've got to make a lot to get along. There are a lot of expenses." A man needed partners or a fingerman, and "good conservative clothes to be inconspicuous and live in good hotels so you won't be noticed, coming and going...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CALIFORNIA: No Future | 4/11/1949 | See Source »

...that his landscape with girls in bathing suits had been "motivated by a mood of joyfulness." ¶Ben Shahn's 73 words were as incisive as his art: "I'll say this much: that art is my particular form of speech, and what ever I feel about men who sing and play guitars, I've said in the present picture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Question & Answers | 4/11/1949 | See Source »

...Rosenberg gallery when a fruit vendor passed in front of me in the sunshine, pushing a little wagon full of peaches. The sight was so much more beautiful than all those dry, thin abstractions inside the gallery. It made me want to paint the richness we can see and feel, not just intellectual constructions." Rivera was coming back to the maxims of his first teacher, old José Posada...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Long Voyage Home | 4/4/1949 | See Source »

Even the mentally ill feel television's hypnotic spell. Indiana State Prison has already reported that television 1) has a calming effect on its mental-case prisoners, and 2) results in a saving on sedatives. Last week, in rural Amityville, N.Y., Dr. George E. Carlin installed five television sets for his mental patients at Louden-Knickerbocker Hall, a 63-year-old private sanatorium. Said Owner John F. Louden: "We're using TV as a form of occupational therapy, to take the patients' minds off themselves and to let them live nearer to a normal life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Sedative | 4/4/1949 | See Source »

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