Word: deepest
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...conductor. He shares with Bernstein an unbounded confidence in his players (though none call him "Gene," as New York musicians call Bernstein "Lenny"); in rehearsals, he treats them with a firm but gentle hand. On the podium, he uses no baton and, with his right hand liberated, gives his deepest concentration to color and balance. Perhaps as a result, his tempos sometimes drift...
...Negroes have not suggested any alternatives to liberalism. Instead they cry a vague, whining idealism about the Negro's right to the world's deepest love...
...growing blizzard of paperwork piling up on U.S. business, the country's 13,500 commercial banks are slogging through the deepest drifts. Last year, the public scribbled 14 billion checks-almost double the number of a decade ago-and by 1975 they will be writing 29 billion annually. Since the end of World War II, the number of bank accounts has risen 33%, commercial loans 113%, mortgages 290%, and consumer installment credit 850%. The answer to the spreading prevalence of paper is mechanization, and the nation's big banks have set up their own computer systems. For smaller...
TIME'S Jan. 18 attack on our novel Fail-Safe was not only chillingly inaccurate, but its suggestion that our discussion of modern weaponry is "cruel" and "plays on the deepest fears of humanity" is a shocking insult to the considerable intelligence and sturdy nerves of the American public...
...rather than setting the drama on fire. Part of the trouble is the arena stage: Desire's sense of puritanically suffocated beings seeps away on a wall-less stage, and, paradoxically, the movie-close-up intimacy of such a stage makes silence more dramatically potent than speech. The deepest flaw is O'Neill's failure to understand the essence of the Greek tragedies from which he borrowed. The Greek hero was a man trying to be god and failing, the tragedy of overweening pride. O'Neill's heroes indict god for failing...