Word: simplest
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...simplest divorce Babs had been through yet. It had taken her nearly three years to get rid of Count Haugwitz-Reventlow, her No. 2 boy, and six weeks in Reno to shake Prince Alexis Mdivani (of "the marrying Mdivanis"), her first husband. Hollywood gossips said that No. 4 was already waiting in the wings...
...what they said and did, men were still, as in the aftershock of a great wound, bemused and only semi-articulate, whether they were soldiers or scientists, or great statesmen, or the simplest of men. But in the dark depths of their minds and hearts, huge forms moved and silently arrayed themselves: Titans, arranging out of the chaos an age in which victory was already only the shout of a child in the street...
...power might easily bring disaster as prodigious as the evil. The bomb rendered all decisions made so far, at Yalta and at Potsdam, mere trivial dams across tributary rivulets. When the bomb split open the universe and revealed the prospect of the infinitely extraordinary, it also revealed the oldest, simplest, commonest, most neglected and most important of facts: that each man is eternally and above all else responsible for his own soul, and, in the terrible words of the Psalmist, that no man may deliver his brother, nor make agreement unto...
...simplest terms, a radar set shoots radio energy at a target, catches the reflected echo, times the round trip, divides by two, and. since the speed of the radio wave is known, translates all the information into a "blip" of light on a fluorescent (television) screen showing the target's distance and position...
...delegate had the right to place his country's final approval on the charter. Since the charter is a master treaty, governments at home must ratify it before it becomes binding. Simplest ratification procedure would be Saudi Arabia's: King Ibn Saud had only to glance at it and say: "Afarim!" ("Well done!"). The British Cabinet is empowered to ratify treaties, but only after Parliament has had an opportunity to discuss them and raise any questions it wishes...