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Word: screens (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Presenting Lily Mars (M.G.M.) is a conventional screen version of 73-year-old Booth Tarkington's tale of a stagestruck small-town girl. This juvenile darling (Judy Garland) gets to Broadway before you can say Jake Shubert, marries a great producer (Van Heflin), and is soon seen swaying in black tulle in a super-sumptuous musical show staged by the lucky fellow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, May 24, 1943 | 5/24/1943 | See Source »

...political implications of these moves are painfully obvious. Reticent about meeting Roosevelt in a fourth campaign, the G.O.P. is deliberately laying a smoke screen to prevent the country from choosing the most able leadership by such clear cut issues as past performance and future promise. Still applicable in the strain of war are Washington's words of 1788 that "I can see no propriety in precluding ourselves from the services of any man, who on some great emergency shall be deemed universally capable of serving the public...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fourth Term | 5/17/1943 | See Source »

Cones & Rods. The retina (the screen upon which the lens of the eye casts the image) has two kinds of visual cells: cones, each with its direct line to the brain; rods connected in multiple to the optic nerve fibers. The cones give sharp, color vision, work in bright light only. The rods "gang up" faint and dim impressions in weak light, catch no color. Some animals have cones but apparently no color vision; no known color-seeing animals have rod cells alone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Seeing Colors | 5/10/1943 | See Source »

...Garand rifles need no longer be fired to line up the sights for factory tests. A new method of testing the sights, developed in the General Electric laboratories, uses a plug holding a mirror inserted in the barrel to line up images of front and rear sights on a screen. Time, ammunition and manpower are thus saved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Wartime Technology, May 10, 1943 | 5/10/1943 | See Source »

...translate, Saroyon's message of man's basic goodness to a medium such as the screen requires a delicate hand, because the idea is very apt to be overdone. Clarence Brown, producer director, and Howard Estabrook, who wrote the screen play, try very hard but they sometimes outdo the shaggy-haired eccentric in being sloppily sentimental. "The Human Comedy" is the story of a typically Saroyan family in the typically Saroyan town of Ithaca, California. There is Homer MacCauley, who pedals a bicycle for Postal Telegraph and learns about life (Saroyan life, that is) from veteran telegrapher Frank Morgan...

Author: By I. M. H., | Title: MOVIEGOER | 5/10/1943 | See Source »

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