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

...much as the steamship companies would like to attract young, fun-loving customers, they must depend mostly on people who can afford to be away from home for an extended trip. A good proportion of cruise travelers are older, monied people, many of them divorcees and widows. To a few frustrated romantics, the cruise ships still hold something of the promise (seldom fulfilled) of the fabled Slow Boat to China. Women seem to like cruises because they can count on good food and plumbing aboard ship, are spared the hazards of finding their way alone through strange cities and into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel: The Bounding Main | 2/16/1962 | See Source »

...Summer School reserves the right to decide on admitting the candidate, although students with unsatisfactory records will not necessarily be rejected. Whether the School will be forced to decide this year "who can gain the most from the opportunity to study at Harvard in the summer" will depend on the number of applicants, Thomas E. Crooks, director of the summer session, said...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Summer School to Reverse Admission Policy If Applications Increase Again | 2/12/1962 | See Source »

...issued guidelines to define areas of established defense and national policy. But it is impossible to cover every case that might arise. There is no formula by which a speech can be reviewed. No computer can be programmed to clear one phrase and delete another. The review process must depend on the judgment and common sense of the men who deal with these problems every...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Investigations: More Than an Accent | 2/9/1962 | See Source »

...once a movie has been able to handle mental illness and sexual aberration from a perspective that is as natural as it is sensitive. Too frequently such movies depend entirely on the theme for their success. And too many also lapse into a slightly righteous indignation at the brutal misunderstanding of the so-called healthy world without ever sympathetically coming to grips with the tension implicit in the vague difference between normality and abnormality. Others have simply over dramatized the sensational aspects of the problem. The Mark manages to avoid these pitfalls. With a great deal of insight and considerable...

Author: By Kathie Amatniek, | Title: The Mark | 2/8/1962 | See Source »

...more important to him generally than the school in which he happens to teach. He may shift schools but scarcely ever will be able to shift departments. His advancement, within his college or from a job in one college or from a job in one college to another, will depend not on his virtues as a teacher (who is to judge that?) but on his standing in his discipline, and this standing is measured by a) his doctoral degree (granted by a group of people who have such degrees in the same discipline); b) his publications (in the journals...

Author: By Nathan Glazer, | Title: Department Disciplines Criticized by Sociologist | 2/5/1962 | See Source »

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