Word: belongs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Kreinheder has been more hermit than monk, since the three companions who helped him found his Congregation of the Servants of Christ soon gave up. His major support comes from the 300 Lutherans who belong to his Fellowship of St. Augustine, occasionally visit the monastery to make retreats and join him in prayer. Kreinheder has no pastorate, supports himself by raising sheep, gets advice and a helping hand in the fields from the sympathetic Catholic monks of nearby St. Benedict of Montefano Monastery...
...most stereotyped examples of social pressure are the sororities, to which just under one-quarter of the women belong. "Pledges," the sorority initiates, are urged to look their best and to act sociably. A few sororities reputedly accept only blondes. One "Sally," as the house members are called, said that "the girls think only of dates, and nothing else...
...ever had, the role of U.S. weaponry in the defense of the free world and the roles allotted to its allies have become a subject of deep dispute. At some points, the questions turned on diplomacy, not weaponry, and what blame there was to be meted out did not belong to him. Nevertheless, since he has become the most powerful man in President Kennedy's Cabinet, only in the record and personality of McNamara, his policies in the present and his design for the future, can real understanding be reached of the angry words that last week swirled throughout...
...hides in the bedroom till the fellow goes away. "To avoid gossip," he explains a little too anxiously, and she accepts his explanation. But about the same time she discovers that her loaded gun is missing, and that night she sees on his arm a peculiar scar that could belong only to one man: the quisling, now a fugitive, who supervised the torture and murder of her husband during the German occupation...
...I.A.M.'s aerospace problems, in a new year of hardening labor negotiations, are further symptoms of the current predicament of organized labor (TIME, Jan. 25). Union-shop agreements now cover 74% of all U.S. workers covered by collective bargaining agreements, but the number of hourly workers eligible to belong to such unions is being shrunk by what labor experts call "erosion of the bargaining unit." In some industries, notably aerospace, hourly workers are soon upgraded to salaried workers; in others, they are being automated out of jobs. The number of hourly workers in auto plants has dropped from...