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Word: wrath (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...China's recent entry into the United Nations and the potential effect on Thailand's 3,000,000 Chinese-nearly 10% of the total population-though they had given no signs of restiveness. "We do not know for certain which ideology they prefer," he said. His real wrath, however, was directed at Parliament, some of whose members-from the gov ernment's own party-had threatened to block the military budget unless the Cabinet doubled their $50,000 annual allowances for vote-winning projects in their provinces. At a jammed press conference, Premier Thanom also complained bitterly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THAILAND: The Same Old Crowd | 11/29/1971 | See Source »

...damned odd one." In fact, Wylie was an early supporter of women's rights. But his description of Mom as "a puerile, rusting, raging creature" did little to dispel the notion that he was indeed a confirmed misogynist. Few facets of society escaped Wylie's wrath over the 50-year span of his literary career. The Princeton-educated iconoclast was a prolific writer of overstated and splenetic books and magazine articles in which he inveighed against everything from preachers to pollution to "pompous slut" politicians. This year, in Sons and Daughters of Mom, Wylie turned his guns from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Nov. 8, 1971 | 11/8/1971 | See Source »

Sense Over Intellect. Born on July 12, 1904, in Parral, Chile, Neruda was already writing poems by the age of eight, although his father, a railroad worker, hated poets and would burn his son's notebooks. Fearing his father's wrath, he first used the pen name Pablo Neruda when he was 15, taking the surname from the Czechoslovak writer Jan Neruda (1834-91). In 1923 his first volume of verse, Crepusculario (Twilight), was published. A year later, he followed with Twenty Love Poems and One Song of Despair, a book that remains his most popular, with more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Prize for a Chilean Poet | 11/1/1971 | See Source »

DIRECTED BY JOHN FORD In this piece of lightweight scholarship, Director-Critic Peter Bogdanovich reviews the career of John Ford as if he were anatomizing the canon of Yeats. Ford, director of classic Americana from Stagecoach to The Grapes of Wrath to The Last Hurrah, is an artist of enormous sweep. But he has been guilty of certain venial sins, among them boozy sentimentality and the use of overfamiliar stock characters. In Bogdanovich's eyes every blemish is a virtue, and no detail is too trivial to examine. He traces, for example, the history of a gesture first used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Festival (Contd.) | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

...most part, it would concentrate its fire on the largest unions and biggest companies. A POWER TO FINE. The board would try to operate with a minimum of compulsion. Many unions and companies would voluntarily refrain from posting outsize increases, out of fear that the board would arouse the wrath of the public against them. Okun hopes that in practice most would seek the board's guidance informally before negotiating wage increases or raising prices. As a last resort, the board could forbid by law or rescind any increases that it found excessive. It could seek injunctions and fines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: What to Do in Phase II | 10/11/1971 | See Source »

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