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Word: mastered (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...completing work on a master's degree in civil engineering at M.I.T., Weber has decided to give up coaching for a while and take a job in California...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Lightweights Will Row at Henley | 5/31/1966 | See Source »

When the physician decides to support the patient with mechanical aids after the EEG has gone flat, says Surgeon Charles F. Zukoski III of the VA Hospital in Nashville, he runs the risk of letting the machine become his master. Slowly but inexorably, the blood pressure will fall until it can no longer support the kidneys or other viral organs. "This," says Dr. Zukoski, "is an agonal type of death. We can carry the prolongation of so-called life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Thanatology: What Is Life? When Is Death? | 5/27/1966 | See Source »

...just been ordered to quit port on the next steamer. Melina first appears in funeral garb, crying into her former paramour's bier while one black-olive eye winks out a thinly coded message to Garner. When her friends are in trouble, Melina growls: "Try the harbor master; he is in love with my aunt." When a search party orders her to take everything off, she starts by removing her eyelashes, then plucks away most of her coiffure, lets her remaining finery come loose in a monsoon of seductive disorder. In a comedy so frequently becalmed, there is much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Lady's Day in Lisbon | 5/27/1966 | See Source »

...This is a life of Balzac, not a critical study," he says in a foreword and, having passed his 80th year, announces that it is the last biography he will write. Nevertheless, Prometheus is strewn with the kind of judgments that a disciple makes at the feet of the master: "A super-novelist," "the greatest novelist of the century." Balzac's very faults become virtues: "The enforced disorder" of his life "reproduces the disorder of life" itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Money, Magic & Love | 5/27/1966 | See Source »

...Dipping his pen in an inkwell of wonders, he has drawn out, in his demonic, forceful fiction (The Family Moskat, The Magician of Lublin, Short Friday), a fantastic and various vision of Eastern Europe's vanished Jewry. His work has already commandingly established him as the greatest living master of Yiddish prose and as one of the enduring leaders among U.S. novelists. Now 61, he has issued a memorable memoir of his Polish boyhood-a group of brief, incidental sketches that Singer first wrote in Yiddish for New York's Jewish Daily Forward. In translation they are brisk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Memories of a Polish Boyhood | 5/27/1966 | See Source »

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