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Word: visee (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Vise (Fri. 9:30, NBC) makes no pretense at handling fact, nor does it seem very handy with fiction. It claims to tell stories of "people caught in the jaws of a vise, in a dilemma of their own making." Last week The Vise had a famous English actress meet a married real-estate agent in a small English town. Sample dialogue: "She: I'm in love with you. He: But you have the whole world at your feet. She: But it's you I want." She gets him. But then he gets her. It seems...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: The Week in Review | 11/14/1955 | See Source »

...Elizabeth no more responsive than a waterlogged stick, until he tries hypnosis. Under hypnosis, Miss R.'s case, as the doctor calls it, becomes the plight of Goldilocks and those old Freudian bears, Superego, Ego and Id. Superego Elizabeth is a tense bundle of inhibitions clamped in the vise of social norms. Smothering within her is a sweet, outgoing girl, her potential Ego, whom the doctor nicknames Beth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: strange case of miss r. | 6/21/1954 | See Source »

Tightening up his too-late theme, Author Lewis turns the vise of his plot until poor Crane is crushed. Trouble begins with some petty thieving of company lumber. Then a company truck is am bushed and the driver killed. The major investigates for Crane, tangles with the local opium-smuggling ring and is blown up with a hand grenade. In the meantime, Crane receives more bad news: the com pany's teak contract has not been renewed; everyone must go home in 21 months. Home for Crane means a dreary London suburb arid a nagging, neurotic wife. Rather than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Anna Doesn't Live Here | 4/26/1954 | See Source »

...Many of them are caught in the vise of tremendous cross-pressures," he added...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Study Finds School Administrators Subject to 'Unbearable' Pressures | 3/22/1954 | See Source »

...Said the Sunday Times: "In all the literature about the Weimar Republic and the Nazis, there has been nothing like it." Grand in scope, minute in documentation (829 pages), Nemesis of Power may not get the U.S. readers it deserves, but it will hold those it gets in a vise of armchair fascination. It is rich in characters and scenes that a novelist might envy and an actor yearn to play. And as the field-grey shadows of the Reichswehr's erstwhile leaders goose-step across the pages of Nemesis of Power, they may well be passing in review...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Ghosts in Field-Grey | 12/28/1953 | See Source »

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