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Word: lumberingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...this might have made an apt subject for contemplative derision had it not been for a solidly built man standing on a rock above the scene, wearing pale brown prescription glasses, a white lumber jacket, and a cowboy hat over hair that flew straight back like porcupine quills. This was George Stevens, beyond question the most respected and probably the most able director in the American film industry, whose reputation was assured by movies like A Place in the Sun and The Diary of Anne Frank. He is now risking it by betting that he can tell The Greatest Story...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hollywood: Forget the incense | 12/28/1962 | See Source »

...mind for anything but opera, and before Hitler took Poland she gushed to the press about his beautiful blue eyes. In 1941 she got a Nazi visa to return to occupied Norway, where she lived well on the profits of her husband's collaborationist lumber business. He died on the eve of his trial during the purge of the quislings in 1946. When Flagstad returned to the U.S., she was greeted with pickets, jeers and stink bombs in the concert halls of three cities. But she was innocent, if naive, and the world soon forgave her. And after...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Liebestod | 12/14/1962 | See Source »

...willing and extremely winning helpers. As Ford's wife, constant listener, chief cook and sole housekeeper, Maureen O'Sullivan pedals from chore to chore on an imaginary bicycle. As a kind of fledgling adult who married the boss's daughter, works for the boss's lumber company and lives in the boss's house, Orson Bean runs Ford a close second in the evening's whoopstakes. Bean moves as if he were being ejected from a toaster, and his voice box is some sort of faulty dishwasher. He and Ford pair off with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Life Begins at 60 | 12/7/1962 | See Source »

...weather the wintry discontent of U.S. justice. He seemed to be charged with everything except starting the Korean war: 15 federal fraud charges of, among other things, making a false SEC report and misappropriating $1,953,000 of the funds of the E. L. Bruce Co., Inc., the lumber milling giant that he had bossed before fleeing last June; twelve New York State charges of grand larceny; a U.S. tax lien amounting to $3,500,000. The erstwhile timber wolf of Wall Street faced up to 194 years in jail. Why then had he returned from extradition-free Brazil...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Ethics: Return of the Naive | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

Gains were general in industries ranging from brewing, cosmetics and food processing to lumber, gypsum and aerospace. Standard Brands' earnings rose from $4.6 million to $5.1 million and Procter & Gamble's from $333 million to $35.1 million. In the long-sputtering transportation business, a 3% fare rise helped lift the profits of United...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Earnings: Better Than Expected | 11/2/1962 | See Source »

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