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Word: fenelon (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...what happened on June 26, 1954, when a 10-foot seiche swept eight Chicago fishermen away in what meteorologists say remains the most destructive seiche recorded here. The Great Lakes are particularly vulnerable to seiches because they are the largest enclosed bodies of water in the U.S. Edward Fenelon, an NWS meteorologist in Romeoville, Ill., however, says fewer than three seiches are reported at each of the Great Lakes each year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behind the Midwest's Crazy Weather | 6/11/2008 | See Source »

...working-class mother of three who with her Catholic conscience whether to have an abortion, what would you choose? Right: Vanessa Redgrave. And if you were English-speaking drama's greatest actress - if you played Mary Queen of Scots and Isa Duncan and Jean Brodie and Fania Fenelon - and you were offered the part a Nashville housewife, what would you do? Right: you'd take...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Prime Time | 4/12/1982 | See Source »

...Collier's, which built its reputation as a fighting journal, it was a tame end. Founded by an immigrant Bible salesman named Peter Fenelon Collier in 1888 (original title: Once A Week), Collier's sent Correspondent Richard Harding Davis to cover the Russo-Japanese War at $1,000 a week, uncovered phony medicines and phony politicians, fought for income taxes, woman suffrage and a host of other causes. It published Henry James's The Turn of the Screw, hired Charles Dana Gibson to draw Gibson girls (at $1,000 a drawing) and Frederic Remington to paint cowboy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Crowell-Collier's Christmas | 12/24/1956 | See Source »

...voters went to the polls last week to choose a President by direct popular election (TIME, Oct. 9). By week's end, according to the first unofficial returns, Candidate Magloire had piled up an early total of 151,115 votes. His only formal opponent, an obscure architect named Fenelon J. Alphonse, polled less than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HAITI: The Winner | 10/23/1950 | See Source »

...with the less-known figures that Mr. Bradford is most successful. Here the narrative details he supplies are fresher and more interesting, and he is well able to reveal an enigma at least where he cannot explain it. Discussing Talleyrand and Fenelon, two men strikingly similar in temperament, worlds apart in their actual careers, his impartial sympathy for both leaves the reader free to enter sympathetically into their characters. It is high praise for this kind of biography to say that it makes the reader eager to go beyond the information given, and study the characters at first hand...

Author: By M. F. E., | Title: BOOKENDS | 4/22/1932 | See Source »

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