Word: playe
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...strategic positions in the process. Harry Truman last week, for no obvious reason, announced that he was always ready to meet Joe Stalin (in Washington). Newsmen in the U.S. and in Europe speculated that the Kremlin might propose a meeting in, say, Scandinavia. Suppose the Russians did decide to play thus on the world's desperate hopes? From TIME'S Berlin Bureau Chief Emmet Hughes came this assessment last week...
Poet-Dramatist T. S. Eliot, who is working on a new play, explained all about it to a reporter who asked what the subject was. "Why, you see," said Eliot, "in the play I study the relations of certain characters with other characters and of certain characters with themselves...
...never read plays," George Bernard Shaw told Broadway Producer Jean Dalrymple. "I think it is a very bad idea for a playwright to read plays. If the play is good he is bound to be influenced by it and even to steal something from...
...novice learn to play golf from a book? The pros are always the quickest to say no. They are also the first to write the books. Last week one of the best of them all, grim little (137 Ibs.) Ben Hogan, published one of the best books of golf dos & don'ts. Some tips from Ben Hogan's Power Golf (A. S. Barnes...
...read greens: "If you can see a shine on the green ... it means that you are putting down the grain of the green. The ball is going to travel very fast . . . When I see a shine on the grass on the right side in lining up a putt, I play to the right even if I don't see a break in the green in that direction ... I know the grain is running from right to left." CJ "When playing mountain courses, remember that putts will always break away from the mountains. That is true, even...