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Word: streamingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Outdoor Restaurant. The Japanese, who spent more than $1 million for their pavilion, have included a pristine Nipponese garden with a languid stream flowing through it like a haiku. Australia, concerned with its environment, candidly displays its depredations of wallabies and alligators as well as other species unique to its island-continent. In all the other national exhibits-those of West Germany (featuring a movie of the ruined Rhine), the Philippines, Iran, Canada, Nationalist China (with a spectacular cinema, a display of art objects and performers celebrating such occasions as Confucius' birthday) and South Korea, which has indoor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: A Place in the Sun | 5/27/1974 | See Source »

Cooper's over-fifty double chin and over-the-belt bulge go well with his British accent. But, his Anglophilic decorum seems incongruous among the insistent telephone calls and the stream of ambitious go-go-booted women who curtly pick up their rejected works. "The divorcees always invite me to their homes," he complains. "I usually refuse. One woman sends me obscene letters. Once she invited me to take a bath with her. I stopped reading her letters until she started writing about all the women who were trying to get me fired. Why? Because I didn't sell their...

Author: By Amy Sacks, | Title: There's No Business Like . . . | 5/22/1974 | See Source »

...company presidents, yacht salesmen and bricklayers, firemen and middle-managers, foremen and farmers and hair stylists-with those few who thought they were in control, with those many more who knew they were not. The excellence of the interviews is hard to convey in brief, since it is a stream-of-consciousness flow that gives them their quality. But the interview with Mike Lefevre, a 37-year-old worker in an Illinois steel mill, is a good example...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Voices of Silence | 5/13/1974 | See Source »

THAT THE CASE was reopened at all testifies to the hold it continues to exert on people's minds--along with a continuing stream of magazine articles and books on the subject, which some people presumably read. There are limits, naturally. Associated Press releases generally say that four students "were killed" after National Guardsmen "were sent" on campus, suggesting that both events were acts of God which no one else could possibly be held responsible for. Similarly, the new grand jury naturally investigated the individual Guardsmen who fired shots, not the people--President Nixon, Spiro T. Agnew, Governor Rhodes...

Author: By Seth M. Kupferberg, | Title: Remembering Kent State | 5/6/1974 | See Source »

...hardest thing about interviewing Merle Haggard," says Los Angeles Correspondent David DeVoss of this week's cover subject, "is finding him." Since Haggard is a compulsive fisherman, ever searching for the perfect lake or stream, DeVoss was sure he had caught his man when he heard that the country singer was at Orange Lake, Fla. DeVoss was about to pack his lures when he learned that Haggard, bitten by the gambling bug, was in Reno, but would meet him in Bakersfield, Calif., for an interview. Four days of high rolling, however, proved too much for Haggard, who called...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, May 6, 1974 | 5/6/1974 | See Source »

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