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Word: slaving (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Jebb called Malik's charge of U.S. aggression a document "beneath contempt, except for its only obvious use, namely, its distribution as a propaganda leaflet." Of Malik's resolution on Greece, Jebb said: "For the representative of a country which maintains millions of its own compatriots in slave labor camps ... to denounce other governments for alleged misdemeanors as regards political prisoners is just about as nauseating a spectacle as that of Satan rebuking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Out of the Stall | 9/11/1950 | See Source »

Instead, The Black Rose devotes much of its footage to an unlikely romance between Power, as the self-exiled bastard son of a Norman earl, and a prattling slave girl-played by plump-cheeked young (20) French Starlet Cecile Aubry as if she were a fugitive from Little Women. Power's odyssey through Asia with a stuffy fellow exile (British Actor Jack Hawkins) is sandwiched between long, talky sequences picturing Norman-Saxon strife in England. And from time to time the film wanders off on little verbal jags to point up its sentimental moral: that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures, Sep. 11, 1950 | 9/11/1950 | See Source »

Shirley May France, 18, decided that her "slave-driving father" was just as tough to take as the English Channel, upped & left her home in Somerset, Mass. to move in with her swimming coach, Harry Boudikian, 35, and his wife Elsie. When father France threatened to go to court to get her back, she went to stay with some school chums in Fall River, but assured the press that she was through with swimming forever: "From now on, my favorite sport is softball...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Roses All the Way | 9/4/1950 | See Source »

...creatures," declared Mark Twain, "there is only one that cannot be made the slave of the lash. That one is the cat. If man could be crossed with the cat, it would improve man, but it would deteriorate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Kit, Kit, Kit! | 8/28/1950 | See Source »

...world's highest-paid musicians, Paul Robeson had traveled far from the house in Princeton, NJ. where he was born the son of a runaway slave. But he wasn't satisfied with his progress in the U.S.; 16 years ago, he went all the way for Moscow, and decided that Negroes had a better chance of advancing under the Commies. For the last three years, in London, Moscow, Paris, Manhattan, he had faithfully slandered the Atlantic pact, the Marshall Plan, the U.S. defense of Korea-shouting, all the while, for Soviet-style "peace...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Journey's End | 8/14/1950 | See Source »

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