Word: streamingly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...most notable sequence: Filmed on the scene of the original battle, it is made vivid and real by the brilliance of technicolor which gives breath-taking color to the outdoor scenes. Charging from either end of a gorge, the soldiers and Indians meet in the shallow water of the stream bed. The battle which ensues is terrific in its ferocity. So much water is splashed that the lens of the camera gets wet--it really does--you can see the drops running down the glass...
...tall, high-domed, horse-fancying Eton & Cambridge-man met the musicomedy star (an Omaha brewer's daughter) in the late '20s, married her at his family's rural, palatial "Chatsworth" (Derbyshire) in 1932, soon established her in their cliff-topping Irish pile, complete with salmon stream, 200 rooms and (she said) one bath. Their daughter (1933) and twin sons (1937) lived only a few hours...
...writes whatever he happens to think of, in a free-flowing stream undammed by grammar or punctuation - and no copy desk corrects him. Example: "I suppose some won't like this I don't care if they do or not this is my opinion . . . that 45 cents for some of them drinks is terrible. . . . Some of this stuff they serve you now has drove more guys to the water wagon than any Lent in history." Roundy Coughlin is Wisconsin's most widely read home-grown philosopher. This week he started his 21st year on the State Journal...
Therefore the HARVARD SERVICE NEWS invites all undergraduates and V-12 students in any class who missed the boat last week to enter its new shorter, stream-lined competition for all boards tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock in the CRIMSON building, the red-brick house on the one-way cow path, 14 Plympton Street. The competition will be designed to find men really interested in putting out a paper in a time when its services, we believe, are more needed than ever before...
From the 230,000-mile operating front a stream of despairing reports flowed. In Buffalo, Railroadman Arthur W. Conley said: "We have been maintaining efficiency only by working employes 70 and 80 and 90 hours a week, but the men are not going to be able to stand it much longer." And the ICC reports on the numerous train wrecks frequently attributed the blame to inexperienced personnel...