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Word: stricting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...Palais in Paris, he and other delegates were working 15 hours a day last week to finish Western Europe's response to the Marshall approach. They had little time for anything but the cold facts. The conference bureau had not sold a theater seat in two weeks. This strict attention to business had produced some results. One delegate reported on the conference's biggest achievement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONFERENCES: Progress at the Palais | 9/15/1947 | See Source »

...muted chamber music produced by Philadelphia's Raphaelle Peale, one of the two best U.S. still-life painters, was almost neurotically strict. He was born into a painting family in 1774; his father and uncle were both artists, and his brother Rembrandt won lasting fame as a portrait painter. Peale, who became a heavy drinker, was ill most of his sober hours, and Author Born thinks that this may have helped him as a painter. Sickness, he reasons, "may become a constructive element in so far as it forces the artist to be more direct, more concise and more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Chamber Music | 9/8/1947 | See Source »

...whole show," with no room for a creative God in the picture, will be baffled or repelled. But those who accept the basic Christian concept of a Creator-God will be rewarded with a full measure of the quality Lewis' devotees have come to expect-a strictly unorthodox presentation of strict orthodoxy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Don v. Devil | 9/8/1947 | See Source »

...unusual for a writer to work in the New Yorker offices for several years without once meeting his editor. The elevator men have strict instructions not to greet him by name, lest he be accosted by some tactless writer or artist in the same car. ... He has relatively few friends and a number of enemies of whom he is, on the whole, rather proud. 'A journalist can't afford to have friends,' he is fond of saying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Nah ... Nah ... Nah | 9/8/1947 | See Source »

Alexander Neill's father was a strict Scottish schoolmaster, who used to spank his children rather repetitiously. Young Neill developed a fear of his father that haunted him until early manhood. Years later, when he began studying child psychology, he decided to found a school of his own, to produce children who would go through life free from fear and who would never need to be psychoanalyzed. Last week, by special invitation, Headmaster Neill, 64, was in the U.S. to give a series of lectures to interested educators and parents on the psychological and educational theories of Alexander Neill...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: That Dreadful School | 8/25/1947 | See Source »

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