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Word: parallelism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...headed east through the long twilight of the 55th parallel-which also crosses Moscow-over the frosted spikes of southern Alaska, and rumbled southward to bore through the storms that lay down the spine of the Rockies. At 2 a.m., in the cold, sub-zero blackness eight miles above the earth, she found the telltale bend in the Missouri River on her radar, opened her bomb bays, and sent-not a bomb, but a long flash on her radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Background For War: MAN IN THE FIRST PLANE | 9/4/1950 | See Source »

Fairbank and Schwartz, while while they were in fundamental agreement, emphasized the need for caution in crossing the 38th parallel. A blunt march over the line could fire Russian feeling beyond the kindling point, they suggested. Hence the campaign in what is now Northern Korea should be waged only after such a project has received the blessing...

Author: By Rudolph Kasb and Bayley F. Mason, S | Title: University's Asian Experts Prescribe Far East Policy | 9/1/1950 | See Source »

...enter the war. All of the experts feared that war with Mac would be fruitless for both sides and Fairbank and Hopper feel that Chinese entry into the Korea fight is a possibility. Fairbank says there is still a danger of Chinese intervention if U.N. troops cross the 38th parallel. War with Red China, he said, would be a bleeding conflict in which "we could not beat them or they...

Author: By Rudolph Kasb and Bayley F. Mason, S | Title: University's Asian Experts Prescribe Far East Policy | 9/1/1950 | See Source »

...University's Far Eastern scholars unanimously favored extension of the U.N. military campaign beyond the 38th parallel. Reischauer put the issue plainly. "The only conceivable military tactic," he said, "is to push on... in fact, if we stopped, few Asiatics would understand...

Author: By Rudolph Kasb and Bayley F. Mason, S | Title: University's Asian Experts Prescribe Far East Policy | 9/1/1950 | See Source »

...fingers cut off." In his monumental monograph, Surgery of Cataract (Lippincott; $30), New York Ophthalmologist Daniel B. Kirby traces the history of operations for cataract (a clouding of the eye's lens) from these harsh beginnings to such present-day refinements as air-conditioned operating rooms and parallel-beam light...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Finger for en Eye | 8/28/1950 | See Source »

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