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...inspiration for another poem, Provide, Provide was a strike of the University's scrubbing staff. The work begins, "The witch that came (the withered hag) to wash the steps with pail...

Author: By Robert H. Sand, | Title: Frost Chides Metaphors, MIT, Footnotes in Speech | 12/4/1956 | See Source »

...incredible youngsters" had evolved their own technique for dealing with the mighty 26-ton tanks. First they would fire on the tanks from upper-story windows, then as the big T-345 rumbled up, their great guns elevated, a small boy would leap out of a doorway, fling a pail of gasoline over the tank's engine compartment and leap back to shelter. As the tank took fire and its crew scrambled out of the turret, the young Tommy-gunner firing from the windows above would mow them down. An alternate system was to slosh a bucket of gasoline...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HUNGARY: The Five Days of Freedom | 11/12/1956 | See Source »

Excitable feared that the whole plan might be lost, and defended it vigorously, calling for it as part of "the Cheap Deal here on campus for student welfare." Sort of a corollary to the New Deal, the Fair Deal, the Square Deal, and the Full Dinner Pail...

Author: By Adam Clymer, | Title: Eddie, Al, and the Boys | 10/26/1956 | See Source »

...York investment counselor named Tellesforo Casanova. After a few years she wrote a novel setting Hal and the world to rights about the whole thing. The book was called Half a Loaf, and its heroine remarked, after leaving her writer-husband: "She had licked the cream off the milk pail; she had had the fresh half of the loaf." Twenty-five years later Gracie evidently thinks that bland diet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Carol Kennicott's Story | 9/17/1956 | See Source »

...Page April 30). who. said Soutine, "was able to express in the body of a woman the atmosphere of Paris. I want to show Paris in the carcass of an ox." This Soutine proceeded to do, hanging up a whole carcass in his studio, refreshing it periodically with a pail of blood from the butcher's shop until the stench of decay brought the police. But the resulting paintings today rank among Soutine's masterpieces. Soutine knew few moments of repose in his frenzied life; as a souvenir of one of them, spent near the cathedral town...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art, may 21, 1956 | 5/21/1956 | See Source »

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