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

...national press and radio "have been full of discouraging chit-chat," Glimp says, and high school guidance counselors have become more careful about Harvard. Moreover, many students and parents may decide that applying to Harvard is not worth the effort. "This rigorous self-selection worries us," Glimp says. Although he sees "no great problem as long as we handle our contacts and the press correctly," Glimp admits, "this could result in less breadth in our applicants...

Author: By Michael S. Lottman, | Title: Admissions Office Faces Dilemmas; Continuing Search for Excellence Clashes With Concern for Feelings | 6/15/1961 | See Source »

...Prime Minister. When Jack and Bobby Kennedy visited England in 1951. they looked him up. Ormsby-Gore returned the visit in 1955 when he came to the U.S. on a lecture tour, and again last March, when he dropped by the White House for a call and a chat. Bobby Kennedy afterward took him on a personally conducted tour of Bull Run. At places and times unknown, he was caught up in the Kennedy clan's family sport. The evidence: interviewed on the BBC last week, he boasted that he was ''one of the few living Britons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: HOW TO BECOME AMBASSADOR TO THE U.S. | 6/9/1961 | See Source »

...Tony present the prizes in a schoolboy photographic contest in London. Delighted to talk on a subject he knew intimately, Tony wrote his own speech, delivered it well. Afterward, reporters and cameramen whom he had known in his single days hesitantly gathered round. He broke royal family precedent to chat with them, and Britain saw Tony in a new, kinder light. Last week's news that Margaret soon would produce an heir was the clincher. Cooed Daily Mail Columnist Eve Perrick: "Whatever the future of Armstrong-Jones as a public figure, of one thing he can be justly proud...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: Surprise | 6/2/1961 | See Source »

Intriguing Idea. In Washington, the Russian visitors watched the U.S. Senate convene, spent an hour talking to Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, and 15 minutes with President Kennedy. But none of this impressed Pravda's Maevsky so much as a chat with Presidential Economic Adviser Walter Heller, who told him, said Maevsky, that the U.S., in the event of peace, could dismantle its defense industries without disrupting its economy. Maevsky found the idea intriguing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Innocents Abroad | 6/2/1961 | See Source »

...Princeton Seminary, was an ardent Buchmanite, and until recently worked fulltime for Moral Re-Armament. Gene mingled with the Buchmanites until one day a wire came from Buchman announcing that he had had "guidance" that Blake should bring John D. Rockefeller III to New York to have a chat with Queen Marie of Rumania. Blake wired back that this might be Frank Buchman's guidance but it was not his. "From then on," he says, "I decided to be an organization man-that is, to work through the regular machinery of the church...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: To End a Scandal | 5/26/1961 | See Source »

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