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Word: monstering (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Seventh Army in Germany went a second battalion of atomic artillery, making a total of at least twelve of the monster 280-mm. A-guns now installed in Germany...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NATO: Old & New | 3/15/1954 | See Source »

...contemporaries came to look on him as a character from one of his own drawings. Benjamin Robert Haydon, the historical painter, wrote five years after Fuseli's death: "[He] was undoubtedly the greatest genius of his day . . . But in the modes of conveying his thoughts ... he was a monster . . . His women are all strumpets, and his men all banditti, with the action of galvanized frogs, the dress of mountebanks, and the hue of pestilential putridity . . ." There is something terrifyingly timely in Fuseli's nightmarish mysticism. In some ways, Fuseli bridges the gap between the 18th and the 20th...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Elegant Terrorist | 2/8/1954 | See Source »

...natural Southwest drama is too slow to interest moviegoers, for life on the desert proceeds lazily. To maintain interest Disney spot lights rare desert events--a Gila monster stalking a desert rat, a summer torrent building up into a wall of water, the blossoming of cactus flowers. The splicing and re-splicing gives the film such a rapid gait that within a few minutes a wild pig chases a bobcat up a hundred foot saguaro, a poisonous wasp vanquishes an equally deadly tarantula, and red hawk devours a rattlesnake. The most callous little boy will lie awake until three...

Author: By Robert A. Fish, | Title: The Living Desert | 2/8/1954 | See Source »

...deeply shocked by Dr. Vance Chat-tin's attitude ... his "heroic" attempts to save the life of a creature that can be described as a monster, makes me doubt in his and his colleagues' sanity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Feb. 1, 1954 | 2/1/1954 | See Source »

...structural entity that weighs on many. Too much like a huge machine, with the soft breathing of its air conditioning, the almost imperceptible but constant humming of its lights, its often subterranean atmosphere, the building seems to some students a monstrous trap or an educational processor--the Frankenstein's monster of a mechanistic age. In spite of all the glass, these dissenters feel sealed into the building. Even a member of the staff said it: "If only we could open a window...

Author: By John A. Pope, | Title: Lamont: Success Story With Stale Air | 1/20/1954 | See Source »

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