Word: boundlessly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...fictional episodes is by Amanda B. Recondwyth. The critics comment on the authors style of writing is "that this gal is unstoppable." The travel section features a story on the "boundless gravel grandeur of Plushwillow Park (L.I.) "The College and Careers Section offers a spoof on the peace corps, entitled "The Snuggly American," and a story on the Coca Cola junior College for Women...
...records, long-playing, left over from the middle '30s ... If there is any current trend toward meeting present problems with old cliches, this is the moment to stop it-before it lands us all in a bog of sterile acrimony.'' President Kennedy and his advisers place boundless faith in his powers of persuasion on TV screens ("We don't need the press any more," said a New Frontiersman last week. "We've got TV") and public platforms. So it must have come as a jolting disappointment to the Administration that the Yale speech notably failed...
...another story, a gaucho is confined to bed for the rest of his life after being thrown by a horse. He hardly cares. The fall has miraculously sharpened his perception so that his memories are boundless: "He knew by heart the forms of the Southern clouds on the 30th of April, 1882, and could compare them in his memory with the mottled streaks on a book in Spanish binding he had only seen once and with the outlines of the foam raised by an oar in the Rio Negro the night before the Quebracho uprising." Borges contrasts this world...
...rather insensitive Sensitive Young Author. Invited to visit a "cousin" named Lancaster who is a shipping executive in Hamburg, the young man has a perfectly hideous time. His notion of himself as Jack the Philistine Killer falls comically to pieces when he finds himself fascinated by Lancaster's boundless, vulgar energy...
...Western standard of living. Less than a century after its awakening from feudalism and only 16 years after the soul-crushing devastation of World War II, Japan ranks among the world's great industrial powers. Stimulated originally by liberal transfusions of U.S. aid* and propelled by the boundless energy of its people, Japan last year boosted its national output to $45 billion-four times the highest prewar level. Exporting at the rate of $4 billion a year (triple the 1951 rate), Japan today is the U.S.'s single biggest trading partner after Canada; last year Japan...