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Word: canadianization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...this point. Trace's critique meshes precisely with another new report by seven indignant American, British and Canadian reading experts. Tomorrow's Illiterates (Little, Brown; $3.95) is edited by English Professor Charles C. Walcutt of New York City's Queens College. He cites one series of primers as typical of "vocabulary control": at the end of first grade, after using four books, the child learns 235 words, endlessly repeated in 7,257 words of text...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: What Ivan Reads | 11/17/1961 | See Source »

Syrian in derivation and Canadian by birth, Paul Anka was raised in Ottawa, where his father ran a restaurant called The Locanda. At twelve, Paul organized his own trio, at 14 he sold his first song-to a small record company in Los Angeles. Blau Wildebeeste Fontaine sold a mere 3,000 copies, disappointing the ambitious youth, who felt that the world was passing him by. But then came the climax of a lifetime. "It was in the spring of my fifteenth year," he recalls solemnly. In stirring tribute to an older woman (she was pushing 18), he wrote Diana...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tin Pan Alley: Paul the Comforter | 11/3/1961 | See Source »

...North American skies were far from empty. Aloft were 1,800 NORAD fighter planes, from long-ranging F-101s to speedy new F-106s on some 6,000 intercept sorties. On the radarscopes of distant destroyers and aircraft, of early-warning stations from the Canadian Arctic and Alaska to towers planted deep in Atlantic waters, appeared a multitude of bogey blips. They were caused by about 250 Strategic Air Command B-478, B-528 and refueling tankers, along with Vulcan bombers of Britain's Royal Air Force. Many of these planes were homebound from foreign bases; others had slipped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Defense: Testing the Shield | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

...most recent book to attain its majority before it left the publisher's delivery room is A Passion in Rome, by Morley Callaghan, a 58-year-old Canadian, whose work has the compelling attraction, to lovers of literary underdogs, of being largely unread. Alfred Kazin, a critic of high reputation, has called its author "a fine artist," and Edmund Wilson, whose stature is even more Olympian, wrote last year that Callaghan's work "may be mentioned without absurdity in association with Chekhov's and Turgenev...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Minor Major | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

...hero is Sam Raymond, a high-priced photographer who despises his craft and yearns to be, naturally, a painter. At 39, he has decided that his canvases are worthless and his life pointless. He flies to Rome to do a picture story on the dying Pope Pius for a Canadian weekly, and there, wandering about late at night, meets a drunken, beautiful girl. Sam asks directions of her, and she drifts on. But later, though he did but see her lurching by, Sam realizes that he is in love. He decides to find the girl and salvage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Minor Major | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

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