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...that Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm could stand. After that, he scraped along with the German estates which the Weimar Republic considerately left to him. Berliners got to know him as a fop who drove a racy red roadster to the capital's better hot spots and was unpleasantly wolfish at his own parties. His four sons went various ways : Louis Ferdinand worked for a while in Henry Ford's plant in Detroit, then married a Russian refugee Romanov princess, ended up as a prisoner of the Allies. The eldest son, Wilhelm, lost favor when he married a commoner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: Move Over, Pharaoh | 2/19/1945 | See Source »

...reasons were by no means the ones that might be crudely assumed of such a face in so wolfish a world. Colby is probably the most experienced and skillful intercepter of passes in America. She succeeded then, as she has succeeded in Hollywood, because she had friends in top executive positions almost everywhere and steadily made more, because her face and tongue were an almost irresistible combination, because she had energy, and because she had ideas - "$10,000 ideas" -according to Steve Hannegan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Cover Girl | 1/8/1945 | See Source »

Dona St. Columb, though of the 17th-century English noblesse, has a soul the simplest of women will understand. Love's tide has ebbed, leaving her stranded high & dry with two children and a dim flibbertigibbet of a husband (Ralph Forbes) who seems almost to encourage his wolfish crony Lord Rockingham (Basil Rathbone) to lick his chops at her. Dona is sick of London's mad social whirl, sick, sick, as she tells her husband, of "the stupid futile life we lead here." Finally, one dawn, she packs up and flounces off with her children to their country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CURRENT & CHOICE: New Picture, Oct. 9, 1944 | 10/9/1944 | See Source »

...vignettes of Texas. The elements of this story are a few dingy streets, a beerhouse, a room filled with "the winter day like dirty water," and five principal characters: a gawky young Texas artist; an aristocratic student from Heidelberg with a freshly gashed dueling scar on his cheek; a wolfish but pathetic landlady; Polish pianist; a browbeaten, impecunious professor of mathematics. Out of these Author Porter has carefully built a somber, horrifying picture of a country on the verge of tragedy - a leaning tower ready to fall at the touch of a strong hand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Texas & Berlin | 9/25/1944 | See Source »

...about six or eight months: 1) sitting in his mother's lap at the movies, he was terrified by a picture of a "wolf" (probably Rin-Tin-Tin, says Lindner); 2) next morning, waking early in his cradle, he saw that his father, looking wolfish, seemed to be hurting his mother...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Hypnoanalysis | 8/28/1944 | See Source »

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