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Word: germanized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...addition to the big decisions, the joint communique at conference's end 1) reaffirmed joint support for European unity and German unification, 2) reminded the world in general and Dictator Nasser in particular that the U.S. and Britain still stick by the U.N. Security Council's October resolution on the rights of all nations to passage through the Suez Canal, and 3) set forth an unexpected joint declaration on nuclear-weapons tests. As long as Russia continues to block a general disarmament agreement, the communique said, the U.S. and Britain will have to continue "nuclear testing." Meanwhile, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: Bermuda & Beyond | 4/1/1957 | See Source »

...kind of clearance to a U.S. missile base, the visitor will find there, maneuvering amid weird lunar landscapes and weirder towers, blockhouses and cables, perhaps an ebullient scientist in an aloha shirt, or a fresh-faced lieutenant from M.I.T. handling millions of dollars worth of rocketry, or a gentle German in tweeds who helped Hitler build his V2, or even a space-fiction writer, intense and bespectacled, nosing about the U.S. military establishment for ideas. These are tomorrow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: The Bird & the Watcher | 4/1/1957 | See Source »

...ocean, I remember, was very rough coming over"), the memory of Zeppelins passing thunderously at night above his family's apartment in Bremerhaven, and a fluency only in his native tongue. It was 1917, and the U.S. had interned his father Adolf, an engineer for the North German Lloyd line; Engineer Schriever sent for his wife and sons Bernard and Gerhard, and they soon moved to the German-American community of New Braunfels, Texas. A few days before Ben's eighth birthday, his father was killed in an industrial accident in San Antonio. The boy shouldered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: The Bird & the Watcher | 4/1/1957 | See Source »

More than all the heaped bones in all the charnel camps of Hitler's Germany, such uncomplicated words as these from the diary of a sensitive little Jewish girl named Anne Frank are making many Germans conscious of the enormity of the crimes they once condoned. Her poignant, posthumously published and dramatized diary became a hit play in scores of German cities as well as in the U.S. She herself, dead at 15, lies buried in a mass grave at Belsen, 50 miles south of Hamburg, where some 25,000 of her fellow Jews died in the last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WEST GERMANY: The Shame Factor | 4/1/1957 | See Source »

...sixth Rebbe, Joseph Isaac, arrived in New York City, an ill and exhausted refugee from Communist imprisonment and the German bombardment of Warsaw. But in the decade before he died, he planted the Lubavitcher movement deep in the U.S. He organized "Torah Missions," and set up Lubavitcher Bible classes, founded a publishing house to turn out textbooks in English and Hebrew, dispatched missionaries all over the world. After his death in 1949, he was succeeded by his son-in-law, Menachem Mendel, who, like all Rebbes, added Schneerson to his name in honor of Founder Shneur Zalman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Lubavitchers | 3/25/1957 | See Source »

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