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

...George Macready) whose wife shames him into courage; the hotel barmaid (Signe Hasso) with whom Heisler spends his last night in Germany; the old delicatessen man (Felix Bressart) who finally brings him into contact with the underground. By the time George Heisler leaves Germany he knows he has a lifelong debt to pay, not only to full-time antiFascists like himself, but also to many simple human beings, who had risked helping him out of the goodness of their hearts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures, Sep. 18, 1944 | 9/18/1944 | See Source »

With him was Pujo, his lifelong colleague...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Anachronism | 9/18/1944 | See Source »

...Perfect Life. After a stay at his father's sanitorium in New Hampshire, young Sidis returned to Harvard. His lifelong physical awkwardness was already apparent. His "marked distrust of people" did not prevent him from graduating cum laude in 1914, aged 16. Reporters bypassed such classmates as Leverett Saltonstall and Sumner Welles in their eagerness to interview the prodigy. He told them: "I want to live the perfect life. The only way to live the perfect life is to live it in seclusion. I have always hated crowds." But he stayed on to breeze through Harvard Law School...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Prodigious Failure | 7/31/1944 | See Source »

Also included are thumbnail sketches (written with fluoroscopic understanding of the trade-union mind) of many of Dubinsky's predecessors and contemporaries. Tailor's Progress is one of the few readable books about labor, due in part to Stolberg's lifelong familiarity with his subject, in part to his clearly thought-out philosophic position (he was Harvard-trained under Professor Emeritus of Philosophy William Ernest Hocking), which strengthens his thinking without getting in the way of his writing, in part to a gift for phrase typified by Stolberg's famed comment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Pins & Needles | 7/10/1944 | See Source »

...have often been asked what it actually was that made me turn to this remote and out-of-the-way subject. . . ." Two of his own answers: his reading of Goethe, who once thought of writing the Joseph story himself; Mann's lifelong interest in Egypt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Masterpiece | 7/3/1944 | See Source »

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