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Word: haters (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...detective whose job it is to smell out the apparently unmotivated killer. Robert Mitchum has a great deal of laconic authority as the sergeant who holds the harassed gang of soldiers together; Robert Ryan turns in the scariest performance of the season as the over-talkative, pathological Jew-hater. Gloria Grahame is one of the very few well-baked tarts in any recent movie. And Paul Kelly has some remarkably effective moments as the man who hangs around her headquarters like an unwanted stray...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: New Picture, Aug. 4, 1947 | 8/4/1947 | See Source »

...Throw the Commies Out." Joe was so baffled that he was even ready to take advice from his old A.F.L. rival, roughneck, Communist-hater Harry Lundeberg. Lundeberg told him: "Throw the Commies out of your union and get out of that phony C.M.U...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: A Torpedo Named Joe | 1/6/1947 | See Source »

...anniversary, he took inventory of his crusades. Mostly they were small-bore: by carefully contrived cracks against radio, Southern cooking, horse operas, hairdos and politicking veterans, he had snared 10,000 letters. They had called him a "fascist, warmonger, race baiter and moron. Added to draft dodger, horse hater, sadist and war criminal, it seems I am a very unsavory gent, indeed, and I sometimes wonder how I stand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Belt-Level Stuff | 10/21/1946 | See Source »

Proper Name. In Honolulu, John Wahinehookae (Hawaiian for woman-hater) set fire to an apartment house, later explained that his ex-wife lived there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany, Jul. 22, 1946 | 7/22/1946 | See Source »

...what form government takes than with its need to have an acceptable illusion to govern by. Missing from Philosopher Ortega's thesis is evidence that the medieval peasants and Roman multitudes shared his enthusiastic acceptance of the conditions under which they lived. But Ortega-who is paradoxically a hater of the law and of institutions, which he accepts only because he considers them "realities"-insists that oppression can be carried to great lengths before it becomes as destructive and perilous to the life and spirit of man as "the bloody, disgusting zone of revolution." In the strongest, least ambiguous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Duty of Acting Grandly | 6/10/1946 | See Source »

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