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Word: gelsenkirchen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...said the Americans can't behave like European fans. A large contingent filled a corner of a terrific stadium at Gelsenkirchen, a Ruhr valley town about 60 miles northeast of Cologne, at the end of a hot sunny day. They were drinking hard; they were dressed to the hilt in U.S. national team shirts (and the inevitable baseball hats); there were Elvis impersonators and even some moron in an Uncle Sam outfit. We were rolling. "It's going to be like a snowball, like Lance Armstrong winning the Tour," asserted Christian Kantlehner, 23, from Rutland, Vermont, anticipating...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Cup: The U.S. Learns How (Not) to Play — the Hard Way | 6/12/2006 | See Source »

...abolished, analysts say, some new businesses may open in the short term. But their chances of survival are slim. "Many will be based on unsound foundations without the managerial knowledge taught in the master's courses," says Gerhard Bosch, vice president of the Institute for Labor and Technology in Gelsenkirchen. "A spate of bankruptcies will be the consequence." Bosch also fears that few of these new and probably under-capitalized handicraft businesses will invest in vocational training, thus endangering the future of the crafts tradition itself. And Heinz Putzhammer, a DGB board member, thinks ditching the Meisterbrief may be poor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Let the Start-Ups Begin | 5/25/2003 | See Source »

Normally, Wirtschaftswunderkind Erhard has been able to allay economic fears with his prosperous presence and confident campaign style. This time the hecklers got the better of him. Speaking in Gelsenkirchen during the last week of the campaign, Erhard was confronted by a grim-faced chorus of Kumpel (miners) who closed in about the speaker's platform carrying black flags and muttering about impending mine closings. "Shameless riffraff!" snapped Erhard when they booed him. "If it hadn't been for me, these louts and hoot owls would have rotted in their diapers. Never have I seen so much stupidity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Low on Steam | 7/22/1966 | See Source »

Deserting college in her third year, she headed for Europe "to have a place where I could be lousy and make all my mistakes." After a year of study in Vienna, she sang for three years with Germany's Gelsenkirchen Municipal Opera. But each summer she always made it a point to come back to California to sing at the Hollywood Bowl "just to make sure the people of America didn't forget about me." She can rest assured. At 31, thanks to her Semiramide performance and an excellent new London recording, Presenting Marilyn Horne, she now ranks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Opera: Out of the Shade | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

...main street of the Ruhr Valley city of Gelsenkirchen one morning last week, a schoolgirl marched up to a young man and popped an odd sort of question. "Herr Huett," said she, "what about Goethe's Prometheus?" Without a moment's hesitation, the young man threw back his head and began to recite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Pomes Penyeach | 8/10/1953 | See Source »

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