Word: saws
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...would win the 880-yd. title, and though she was suffering from such a bad cold that every breath caused pain in her chest, she won in record time (10:16.2). He told John just how fast to swim each lap of both the 440 and the 1650, and saw John follow orders so closely that the youngster broke six world records on the way to winning both races. In the 1,650-yd. swim, John kicked along so well that he cracked four records before he finished the grind...
...story which no one wanted. A war novel, it had been kicking around producers' offices for about eight years, was considered too diffuse and sprawling for the screen. Lichtman liked it anyway, painstakingly turned out a script, came out of retirement at Fox's request, saw The Young Lions through production, died a month before its release...
...Kress & Co., founded 1896, was beginning to feel its years. While its five-and-ten competitors expanded vigorously into the suburbs and prospered in the postwar boom, Kress kept its stores in the downtown sections, saw sales of its 261-store chain slump from $176.2 million in 1952 to $158.6 million last year. Shareholders could do little to change management's conservative policies because the controlling stock-a 47% block-was held firmly by shy Chairman Rush Harrison Kress, 80. He owned 5% outright and traditionally was permitted to vote the 42% owned by the Samuel H. Kress Foundation...
...businessmen; they put Tsubame back to work after World War II, when its shabby flatware industry was nearly defunct. The first few small orders from occupation forces for stainless-steel flatware helped keep its 15,000 people alive. Then in 1949, some U.S. cutlery companies saw in Tsubame a wonderful opportunity. The U.S. companies wanted low-priced stainless steelware to undercut the high-quality product that Europeans had begun shipping to the U.S. They sent technicians to Tsubame, supplied it with equipment, orders and credits When U.S. silverware makers also be gan feeling hot European competition against their plated tableware...
...Holland saw a first novel by a Dutch lady of 67. Her writer's stock in trade was elementary-just a bagful of old memories. Yet with them she managed to fashion a book whose style owes nothing to other writers, whose substance is the stuff of a faraway East Indies setting both languorous and violent. In translation, Maria Dermout's The Ten Thousand Things is an uncommon reading experience, an offbeat narrative that has the timeless tone of legend. Sybille Bedford, another late-starting, first-rate first novelist (TIME, Feb. n, 1957), has put it well: "Someone...