Word: chambered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Some of the outraged or apprehensive witnesses who showed up in Washington last week represented organizations or industries who batten on expense-account living. Henri G. Foussard, president of the St. Paul Chamber of Commerce, insisted that "wives have as much right to eat on the expense account as the First Lady does"* And President Andrew Ziomek of the National Licensed Beverage Association lugubriously predicted massive losses for bars and taverns, which "have provided the lubricant that has greased the wheels of American industry...
...comic, like Mrs. Amelia Bloomer. For better or for worse, the U.S. has taken a good deal of his advice. Strikers, for instance, whose cause Sinclair fought from Pasadena to Passaic, are no longer jailed out of hand by local police chiefs acting under the orders of the Chamber of Commerce. Late in his autobiography there is a wistful recognition of the fact that no one any longer thinks of him as an enemy of established society and that the world he rebelled against has disobligingly vanished...
...rooms and "chums" (the came originally from "chamber ') from the Class of 1966 was the project of a three-man commit- senior advisers, headed...
...serious student musical groups at Harvard exist mainly for their members and only secondarily for their audience. The purpose of these groups--orchestras, choirs, chamber ensembles, and the like--is to give their players and singers a first-hand look at fine music, to help them develop musical ability and enjoyment, and to give performances in which both the audience and the players can learn and take pleasure...
...GERALD O. GROW '64 is of the Harvard-Radcliffe . He has played the clarinet Society Orchestra, the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, and in chamber groups...