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Word: prussianize (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...pound time bomb that detonated in Hitler's East Prussian field headquarters on July 20, 1944 killed four men around him, but left a barely injured Hitler alive to take a terrible revenge. He had thousands of suspects rounded up - field marshals, trade-union leaders, ambassadors, mayors, army officers, politicians. Many were jailed or slain. The eight ringleaders were tortured for days by Gestapo experts. Finally. Hitler said: "It is my wish that they be hanged like cattle." The eight were stripped, and as they shivered in the chilly dawn, their necks were encircled by short, thin string attached...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: The Man with 1,000 Secrets | 8/2/1954 | See Source »

...World War I, four old empires died: the Russian, Prussian, Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian. The rot spread to Asia, and from the Middle East to Indo-China, the surge towards independence stirred among a billion people. World War II rocked the remaining empires: Japan's was liquidated; so was Mussolini's. In the past ten years, 600 million Arabs and Asians have won political independence, established ten new sovereign states.* France, expelled from Syria and Lebanon after World War II, is on the way out of Indo-China. The once prosperous Dutch East Indies has become the unprosperous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IMPERIALISM: Will Chaos or Order Take its Place? | 5/17/1954 | See Source »

...unpretentious as the characters of his paintings -and as much a victim of hard knocks as they. Before 1943 he taught drawing at the Fine Arts School in Kaunas, the capital of his native Lithuania. Then the Nazis shipped him off as a slave laborer to an East Prussian farm. There Kasiulis milked cows and painted portraits of local German bigwigs, a service for which he was rewarded with extra food rations. After the war, helped by sympathetic Allied officers, he made his way to Paris, where he got a job as a nightwatchman. By night he patrolled a radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Joy of Living | 5/17/1954 | See Source »

...Luftwaffe general, Smiling Al Kesselring lacked the dash of a Rommel, the Prussian rigor of Von Rundstedt, or the inventive flair of a Guderian; yet he fashioned a career almost as brilliant as theirs. At war's start he commanded a single air fleet in Poland, later bossed all German air forces in North Africa, took charge of the Mediterranean theater in the slow German retreat up the boot of Italy, and ended the war as commander in chief in the West. As told in Kesselring's foot-slogging style, much of this story borders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Smiling Al | 4/19/1954 | See Source »

...Prussian - born philosopher -- called Protestantism's number one philosopher two years ago by "Time" magazine--has been at Union since 1933, when his professorship at the University of Frankfurt was taken from him by the Nazis...

Author: By William W. Bartley iii, | Title: Paul Tillich to Become Divinity Professor Here | 4/12/1954 | See Source »

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