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Word: wall (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Catacombs & Souvenirs. A whole college of architects headed by Belgium's Paul Rome was appointed to design the pavilion. On a 153,000-sq. ft. plot just across from the U.S. pavilion, they built a high plaster wall around Civitas Dei. Inside is a slope-roofed church with a capacity for 2,500 standees (only the aged and infirm may sit), a 200-seat chapel and six smaller chapels. The pavilion also includes a restaurant for 2,000 and a three-story display building. Besides numerous Masses and multilingual confessors, attractions will include a 40-yd. mock...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Churches at the Fair | 4/21/1958 | See Source »

Carillon & Congresses. On a plot of only 13,500 sq. ft., the Protestant pavilion consists of a prefab circular church that will hold 200 people and a prefab one-story display building. Wide arcs of the church wall are glass, so that the passing crowd will be able to look in upon the worshipers at the two daily services (four on Sundays). "We wanted the public to see what Protestant worship is like," says the Rev. Pieter Fagel of The Netherlands, Evangelical Reformed chairman of the pavilion committee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Churches at the Fair | 4/21/1958 | See Source »

FORD'S TOP BRASS will join with Wall Street's Lehman Bros, to form new open-end, i.e., unlimited shares, mutual fund. Lehman will underwrite and manage fund, will have it buy out Aurora Corp. (assets: $36 million), an investment firm owned largely by Ford executives. New fund, called One William Street Fund, will have Ford Chairman Breech and four other Ford veterans on 13-man board...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Clock, Apr. 21, 1958 | 4/21/1958 | See Source »

...Russian bear and the Wall Street bear behave, and if Abdullah Doe in the Middle East can keep his fez on, 1958 will be the dizziest, busiest merry-go-round in European travel history." Nearly 700,000 voyaging Americans are about to make this breezy prophecy come true. An impressive number of these U.S. tourists will carry a stowaway-Temple Hornaday Fielding. He conies handily packaged in a fact-and opinion-crammed, hard-cover container called Fielding's Travel Guide to Europe, 1958-59 (895 pp.; Sloane; $4.95). Annually revised since its '48 debut, Fielding's Guide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: No. 1 Travel Guide | 4/21/1958 | See Source »

...tried to escape. I went out for House dramatics, hoping that I could enter into the world of Bohemia but I was cut off from that land by the glass wall. My acting--like a robot, they told me. I tried growing a beard but it was no use. I knew it was wrong, knew I was nothing but a Pyrex flask with a fiberglass beard. So I gave up and shaved it off. I began to think that perhaps it was my fate to become an Erlenmeyer flask. But fate or not, still I struggled...

Author: By James A. Sharaf, | Title: Flameproof | 4/16/1958 | See Source »

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