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Word: fountains (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Carlo Cabrini) is a welder, an ordinary workingman: doomed to his job, tied to his home town. Sicily seems to him an inhospitable place. The company hotel looks like a concrete waffle. The nearest town is huts and ruts. The local night life is limited to a single soda fountain of soul-searing fluorescence. After three weeks in this hell, the miserable welder imagines home as heaven and his fiancée (Anna Canzi) as an angel. When she sends him a letter, he greets it like an annunciation. Eagerly he replies, and soon the fiancés are writing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: A Long Engagement | 1/31/1964 | See Source »

...MOVE-Wise, 50 West 57th. Throwing switches and turning on paintings is an esthetically cold, if ingenious, game, but a dozen U.S. and European artists amuse themselves anyway by applying physics to esthetics. Things like Len Lye's tingling, kinetic steel Fountain and Agam's movable painting, Le Grand Cercle. Through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: MIDTOWN | 1/17/1964 | See Source »

...toast, coffee, tea or one-half glass of milk, and some tinned peaches with heavy syrup; 4 hours before the flight, 8 to 16 ounces of any of the calorie-rich reducing liquids." > On bidets: "It's no good to say 'It's not a drinking fountain,' because your child will still want to know what it is. There's no use your giving your child a purposely wrong answer. 'It's a foot bath' can only lead to future embarrassment, misinterpretation and general confusion. As far as I know, there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel: Take the Children | 1/17/1964 | See Source »

MILTON HEBALD-Nordness, 831 Madison Ave. at 69th. Sometimes tender, sometimes turgid figurative sculpture by a classically inspired New Yorker who lives in Rome. At best, Hebald's pot-bellied centaurs, lovers lounging in urnlike bathtubs, and fountain topped by the refugees on Noah's Ark (including a brontosaur that presumably fell overboard) are full of frivolous immediacy. Through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art In New York: Art: Dec. 6, 1963 | 12/6/1963 | See Source »

...Problems. Pepsi's Kendall, a husky, hard-working onetime fountain-syrup salesman who tripled sales and quintupled profits in six years as Pepsi's international president, has much in common with Coca-Cola's President J. Paul Austin, who took over his company last year. Both have Southern ties: Kendall was a football tackle for Western Kentucky State College; Austin spent his early youth in LaGrange, Ga., before moving up to Harvard Law School. Both are unusually young to head major corporations: Kendall is 42, Austin 48. Both advanced up the corporate ladder through the export division...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marketing & Selling: Pepsi v. Coke | 10/18/1963 | See Source »

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