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

...have shaken many other Catholic educators, but even banning steady daters from extracurricular activities seems unworkable to Chicago's archdiocesan school superintendent, Msgr. William McManus. He prefers counseling to regulating, even though "steady dating is getting to be old hat in Chicago." As for public schools, one top Denver official typically rejects rules on dating as "an invasion of rights that belong in the home." San Francisco's School Superintendent Harold Spears holds a really steady view of steady dating: "I think that's a natural biological urge, and I would hate to have to enforce...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Schools: Father Carey's Chickens | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

...Brown Palace Hotel in Denver last week, a bearded ecclesiastic startled the desk clerk by trying to get change for a napkin-sized, 1914-era $100 bill, given to him, he explained, by his grandmother. The well-heeled visitor was one of 16 Russian church leaders who showed up at the National Council of Churches' General Board meeting, to be greeted coldly by some protesting right-wing fundamentalists and warmly by two of the nation's most prestigious Protestants: J. Irwin Miller, layman president of the council and Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, Stated Clerk of the United Presbyterian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ecumenicism: The Russian with the $100 Bill | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

They sounded like practicing Russians. At a Denver press conference. Archbishop Nikodim of Yaroslavl and Rostov, who also led the Russian Orthodox delegation to the third Assembly of the World Council of Churches in New Delhi, boasted that "we come to you from a socialist state, where our people are creating a new, dynamic society. The Russian Orthodox Church supports the aspirations of our people for friendship with all peoples of the earth." At the close of the board meeting, the Russians will divide into smaller groups, spend most of their three weeks in the U.S. visiting churches across...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ecumenicism: The Russian with the $100 Bill | 3/8/1963 | See Source »

...hymn should be a prayer set to music," says the Rev. Gerrit Barnes of Denver's Christ Church (Episcopal). "It should follow the idea of 'make a joyful noise unto the Lord.''' Ideas change about what is joyful noise, and what is just plain noise. Church musicians and their pastors are quietly revising the nation's taste in congregational song, and in the process are consigning a surprising number of quaint old favorites to oblivion, while searching oblivion for revivable classics. Dr. Charles C. Hirt, professor of church music at the University of Southern...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hymns: A Joyful Noise | 3/1/1963 | See Source »

...longer-leasing firms usually do not aim at the general public. By far the biggest lease customers are corporations (which lease one-fourth of their total auto fleet). For them, leasing is almost always a saving. For one thing, they do not have to tie up capital. The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad concludes that by leasing instead of buying a fleet of 150 cars, it frees $450,000 a year for other investments. Corporations often want to be spared the bother of buying, maintaining and keeping insurance on a fleet of autos, and are able to write off their leased...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transportation: Pay-as-You-Go-Driving | 3/1/1963 | See Source »

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