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

Neither mute nor inglorious was the Younger Milton. A mountainous figure of a man, with a boy's face and a scholar's brain, he was more interested in politics than in daily journalism. He wrote books (The Age of Hate, The Eve of Conflict), contributed to leftist magazines like The Nation and The New Republic, lectured, presided over round-table discussions, was chairman of a Southern committee to study lynching. Long an admirer of Nebraska's Senator George Norris, Milton plugged for the Tennessee Valley Authority when it was no more than a Utopian gleam...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Chattanooga's Milton | 4/8/1940 | See Source »

Navy men kept a discreet silence on the indictments but an anonymous Navy spokesman said cryptically: ''It is public knowledge that Bausch & Lomb are valuable to national defense. We'd hate to see the plant blown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Optical Restraint of Trade? | 4/8/1940 | See Source »

...after a good deal of trouble he shamed his Uncle Ernest into financing his studies. He fell in love with a girl who, as a child, had found it expedient to call her artist father Painter-Man, her mother The House-Mouse. He and the girl had much to hate in common. He was so far cut loose from his family that while his mother died in the next room he sat reading The Way of All Flesh without either emotion or regret for its lack. But the patterns of pain, fear and insecurity were laid deeper than he knew...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sensitive Youth | 4/1/1940 | See Source »

...time since World War II began, the distance between the peaceful world that President Roosevelt visualized and the aims of Nazi Germany as Propaganda Minister Goebbels once defined them: "To unchain volcanic passions, to cause outbreaks of fury, to set masses of men on the march, to organize hate and suspicion with ice-cold calculation." It was a week, too, in which the President's picture of a good peace was measured against World Revolution as Lenin once presented its tasks-destroying the old order from top to bottom, uprooting the old beliefs, shattering the old traditions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: President & Peace | 3/25/1940 | See Source »

...never again see your homes and many have lost forever their ability to work. But you have also dealt hard blows, and if 200,000 of our enemies now lie on the snow drifts, gazing with broken eyes at our sky, the fault is not yours. You did not hate them or wish them evil ; you merely followed the stern rule of war: kill or be killed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World War: Mannerheim to His Men | 3/25/1940 | See Source »

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