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Word: cooperating (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1960
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Usage:

...revived next week in a go-minute condensation), followed by such milestones as The Jazz Age and The Innocent Years (1900-14). For early next year, Hyatt & Co. have prepared a program on American music in the '305 and an examination of The Real West (Gary Cooper narrating) that should leave the average TV oater looking like whinny the pooh. And this Easter or next Project Twenty will complete its life of Christ, taking the story step by step through Tintoretto's Crucifixion and Mantegna's Ascension...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: From the Work of the Masters | 12/26/1960 | See Source »

...convicted killer and B-Girl Winters, who is hooked by-and sleeping with-a dope peddler (Ricardo Montalban). He grows up on Skid Row, where his playmates are rumblebums and his self-appointed guardians are a germy old barfly (Burl Ives), a good-natured prostitute (Jeanne Cooper), a slugnutty prizefighter (Rudolph Acosta), a junk-jabbing ginmill canary (Ella Fitzgerald) and a legless newsboy (Walter Burke) who packs a pretty little...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Also Showing | 12/19/1960 | See Source »

TRUMPETS FROM THE STEEP (268 pp.)-Diana Cooper-Houghfon Mifflin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Self-Portrait of a Lady | 12/19/1960 | See Source »

When lovely woman stoops to the folly of autobiography, the enterprise is all too often flawed by malice, self-pity or a simple failure to grasp the fact that a book is not always interesting to others because its author is interesting to herself. Lady Diana Cooper escapes these dangers. From the first volume of her three-decker autobiography, The Rainbow Comes and Goes (TIME, Oct. 27, 1958), it was clear that Lady Diana is a natural if artless self-historian. Moreover, she has the great advantage that almost every one-she knows is Someone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Self-Portrait of a Lady | 12/19/1960 | See Source »

...picks up the receiver, while "Duckling" is Winston himself, and "Wormwood" is none other than General Charles de Gaulle.* "Duff," of course, is Lady Diana's husband, who died as Lord Norwich in 1954 but who, during the period of the book, was plain Mr. Alfred Duff Cooper, successively army lieutenant, Minister of Information, civilian defense chief in Southeast Asia, liaison man in North Africa and, finally, Ambassador to France, writing the Treaty of Dunkirk, and at the embassy piano listening to "Ernie" Bevin sing cockney ballads. It is by a thousand such little cinema frame snippets that Lady...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Self-Portrait of a Lady | 12/19/1960 | See Source »

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