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Word: shortly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Professor James Duesenberry recommended a short-run tax cut of $5 billion or more in conjunction with an increased government expenditure program...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Four Professors Disagree on Way To End Current Economic Slump | 5/1/1958 | See Source »

...Bauhaus. Paul Klee is an artist who needs no post-scripts or excuses. His touch may become a trifle too casual at times but it never loses its integrity. Its poetry is always there to dwarf the importance of titles and methods. In short, his work stands of its own strength. A comparison of Klee's work with a wall of Kandinskys opposite, is a course in aesthetics all by itself. The similarities involved are sufficiently tangible to have linked the names of Klee and Kandinsky in the public eye. The differences, however, are more significant. Klee is the depth...

Author: By Paul W. Schwartz, | Title: Deutsche Kunst II | 4/30/1958 | See Source »

...short, he is not the passionate Dmitri Karamazov whom Dostoevsky envisioned--the enormously complicated sensualist who could cry out, "When I do leap into the pit, I go headlong with my heels up, and am pleased to be falling in that degrading attitude and pride myself upon it. . . . Though I may be following the devil I am Thy son, O Lord, and I love Thee...

Author: By Frederick W. Byron jr., | Title: The Brothers Karamazov | 4/30/1958 | See Source »

...himself near the close of the novel. The precariously saintly Alexey Karamazov is transformed into a sort of religious straight man, whose feeble pietisms and meaningful stares represent the religious instruction of the movie, and the idiot Smerdyakov becomes a shrewd, calculating, vengeful spirit who falls just a trifle short of being the film's dominant figure...

Author: By Frederick W. Byron jr., | Title: The Brothers Karamazov | 4/30/1958 | See Source »

...quality of stories and poems in The Editor is not at all high, though there are some welcome pieces from the extremely able pen of Arthur Freeman, who in two poems shows his customary grace and imagination with words. Ruth Whitman, too, has contributed an excellent short poem entitled "Aubade." And Robert Johnson, another gifted poet, appears with "A Poem Baltazar Zevakin," which is both funny and visionary...

Author: By Gavin Scotts, | Title: The Editor | 4/29/1958 | See Source »

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