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Word: macedonian (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...offset this traditional dependence, the party commissioned LIFE Senior Editor Gene Farmer to write a marketable history and description of Massachusetts that would even look good on Democratic coffee tables. Farmer did just that. Winging metaphorically from Boston ("a state of mind") to Harvard-M.I.T. ("a modern Macedonian phalanx"), he produced an attractive, knowledgeable study of the state without sounding like a chamber-ofcommerce come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Politics: Fund Raising Without Tears | 1/26/1968 | See Source »

Westerners three years ago, 3,000,000 tourists have swept through-most of them to bask in the sun on once-deserted Black Sea beaches, others to visit Sofia's antiquity-rich hinterland dotted with Thracian, Macedonian and Roman ruins. Recently, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Turkey joined in a tourist venture publicizing "historic" Highway E-5-the Roman route to the Near East that later carried Crusaders and pilgrims in their long journey to the Holy Land. The publicity blurbs pointedly failed to mention that the road also served the Turkish janizaries in their harsh 500-year occupation of Bulgaria...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bulgaria: Big Beat in the Balkans | 11/25/1966 | See Source »

Despite clever barbs and lucent epigrams ("Respect is the only successful aphrodisiac"), Any God Will Do is not as acidly funny as it keeps promising to be. In the past, Condon cultists have been treated to comic narrative leaps performed with the agility of a Macedonian goat, and to sly surrealistic glimpses into the lives of Oedipal wrecks and decent drudges who turn up naked at the Last Judgment. But in this book much of the elan is gone; it sometimes appears as if Condon is padding to keep from plotting. Besides, he seems to hold his nose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Snob's Folly | 10/7/1966 | See Source »

...more difficult. The democratic press exposes leaders to a relentless scrutiny that no putative hero of the past had to survive. Alexander the Great was able to achieve hero status by his own declaration that he was descended from Zeus, and his far-off conquests were known to Macedonian peasants only by a crying in the market-the more magical because it was imprecise. If he slapped a soldier in the face or picked up a beagle by the ears, they might never have known...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: ON THE DIFFICULTY OF BEING A CONTEMPORARY HERO | 6/24/1966 | See Source »

...Samaritans revolted against Alexander the Great and burned to death his prefect Andromachus. An avenging Macedonian army thereupon invaded Samaria, surrounded 300 Samaritan nobles hiding in a cave near Jericho, and by lighting fires at the entrance of the cave managed to asphyxiate the Samaritans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Bible: Superior Samaritans | 4/1/1966 | See Source »

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