Word: ets
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
French actress Paula Dehelly may "dub" [French dialogue] for Bergman, Hepburn, et al. [TIME, May 8], but you were wrong to include Merle Oberon. I recently completed an on-the-set writing assignment for a made-in-France film (Pardon My French) starring Miss Oberon-a double-version with each scene shot first in English and then in French-and I can vouch for Miss Oberon's mellifluent rendition of my English speeches in French translation...
Next week, almost two years older and many pounds (and Dow-Jones points) heavier, the bull will make his second appearance on TIME's cover (thus joining the circle of such cover repeaters as Harry Truman, Winston Churchill, Joe Stalin, et al.). The cover story accompanying his first appearance indicated that TIME's editors were bullish on the U.S. economy and thought that, if all went well, the stock market would advance to about the point it has now reached. Next week's cover story will take a fresh look at the market and the economy...
Preoccupying Issue. In 1946 Zook was appointed head of the President's Commission on Higher Education, supervised the compiling of its long-range, five-volume report which, among other things, strongly urges federal aid to education (TIME, Dec. 9, 1947 et seq.). When Zook leaves his job to write "a couple of books" and do some work for UNESCO's International Organization of Universities, Arthur Adams is sure to find that federal aid to education is still one of the A.C.E.'s most preoccupying issues. Said President-Designate Adams last week: "I'm not worried about...
...Immortal Lovers wipes the paraffin smirk off their faces. As in her past performances (lives of Byron, Shelley, Keats, Oscar Wilde, George Sand, et al.), Biographer Winwar makes the facts highly readable. The true love story of the Brownings is just as exciting as the semi-fictional versions of it, and far more warmly human...
Last fall, Doyle went to Indonesia to cover the Dutch exodus and the rise of a new nation in the troubled islands (TIME, Nov. 14 et seq.). He liked the young, eager, inexperienced Republican leaders, thought they had a fair chance of establishing orderly government amid the ruins of colonial rule and the wreckage of war. After several months in Hong Kong and Siam, he went back to Indonesia to see how the new republic was getting...