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Word: streamingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Alexander Nevsky, Dimitri Pozharsky, Alexander Suvorov, and Mikhail Kutuzov-inspire you!" exhorted Stalin. At this point the cruel, cumbersome five-year industrialization plans paid off. During the long winter of 1941-42, guns, tanks and planes came rolling out of the Ural factories, to be supplemented later by a stream of armaments from the U.S. and Britain. To a U.S. visitor who explained that strikes were holding up U.S. war production, Stalin snapped: "Don't you have police...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Death In The Kremlin: Killer of the Masses | 3/16/1953 | See Source »

...often made the low 80s.) His driving was as sound as ever, but his putting was way off form. He had his toughest time on the Club's twelfth, the "make or break hole." It is a nasty, short hole (155 yards) with an elevated tee and a stream running between tee and green. Ike plunked his first shot into the water. Undismayed, he teed-up another, laid it twelve feet from the pin, was down in two putts for a five...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: The Long Weekend | 3/9/1953 | See Source »

...drawbacks of advancing years," writes Monsignor Ronald A. Knox, in his latest book, The Hidden Stream, "that you never feel quite sure to what extent the coming generation has abandoned the idols of your youth." Monsignor Knox, 65, might reassure himself by looking at his own popularity. A shy but witty man with an archly pure sense of scholarship, Roman Catholic Knox, in his tastes and in the clarity of his thinking harks back to the rigorous England of his youth. Yet a modern public which by & large can no longer digest the simplest of his Latin quotations still queues...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Essays from Oxford | 3/9/1953 | See Source »

...Hidden Stream (Sheed & Ward: $3) is a sharp change of pace from Knox's best-known literary work-a good roomy, English translation of the Bible (which took him nine years to complete-TIME, Nov. 15, 1948). It consists of selections culled from the conferences which he has given through the last dozen years to students at Oxford. Although he left the Catholic chaplaincy there in 1939 after 13 years, he has gone back regularly to lecture successive generations of students. Ranging in their subjects from "What Is Religion?" to "The Christian Notion of Marriage," the religious essays...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Essays from Oxford | 3/9/1953 | See Source »

...people who hope to travel upriver to well-being." Along the winding course ahead are a doctor and patient, a family bathing, nurses drying a sheet before a fire, a good Samaritan carrying a patient across a bridge, and a shepherd with his flock. At the source of the stream a couple roams blissfully in the paradise they have found at journey's end. In its quiet mixture of suffering, hope and joy, the window is altogether appropriate to the hospital setting. The wet light that falls through the colored glass is suggestive less of tears than of cleansing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: WATER & LIGHT | 3/2/1953 | See Source »

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