Word: starting
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...third of the way through the performance, the stunned audience had recovered itself enough to start booing and hissing; by the middle of the evening a fourth of the audience had stomped out angrily. Next day the newspapers were in full and angry cry. Said the critic of Prace: "Even the première audience was often in doubt, and how much more in doubt will be our working people who go to the theater to enjoy themselves and be instructed." Nonsense, replied Director Bohumil Hrdlicka. He had simply been trying to infuse a little life and "socialist realism" into...
...Much as they now want Van Doren to go on, the producers also foresee a chance that audiences may tire of his winning streak. As the Van Doren family's friend, Clifton Fadiman, puts it: "Sooner or later he's going to stop being a Christian and start being a lion...
...getting facts straight by checking them in reference books. Friends have often seen Mark go to a dictionary or encyclopedia a dozen times during a conversation. But Charlie also developed a passion for reading a dictionary as living literature. "When I look up a word," he says, "I start to browse, and next thing I know, I've read four or five pages." (Now he bones up on the Rand McNally Atlas and the World Almanac before his sessions on the air.) One weekend in his teens, he picked up the Bible and read it through. He feels, however...
Polish dailies have not only covered stories like Western papers; they are even beginning to look like them. Though some Warsaw papers have long carried drab, inconspicuous ads, Trybuna Ludu, the official party organ, announced last month that it would start running display ads, which are nonexistent in other satellite papers. Other Warsaw dailies scrambled to sell space, now run whole pages of bold-faced ads for free enterprisers. On one freezing day last week, a Warsaw brewery urged Zycie Warszawy readers: "If you have a cold, fix yourself a mulled beer." Urged the Polish equivalent of an Arthur Murray...
When Green River Steel was conceived at the start of the Korean war, it seemed to Kentuckians a bright idea. The Louisville area was loaded with surplus scrap that could be used to make steel. In the awakening Ohio Valley there were plenty of potential customers. With an $8,500,000 loan from the Government and the rest from private sources. Green River's $13 million plant rose near Owensboro, one of the few new U.S. steel companies in decades...