Word: developement
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Switchboard is now equipped to help students find sponsors for Independent Work projects, special concentrations, tutorials and non-credit seminars. To facilitate the use of these academic structures. People Switchboard is prepared to provide information and advice regarding the relevant procedures and regulations. In the future it plans to develop files on student interests and involvements, corresponding to those of faculty members, in order to help those of like interests find each other...
Maybe not, but it certainly helped her to develop what she had. When Liza was born, Judy was still at the height of her career. It was 1946, and for postwar Americans she still evoked the simpler times when Andy Hardy was in love and the Land of Oz was rainbow hued. Meanwhile, Liza's father, a courtly, cultivated man whom she still idolizes, was busy creating such polished movie musicals as Ziegfeld Follies and Meet Me in St. Louis. Though sometimes frenetic, family life was full of laughter, flowers and music. It was also somehow unreal...
Agee was a writer of urgent social conscience. But he never sought to develop pure aesthetic equivalents for moral and political decisions. Just as his sense of community came from a confidence in the presence of his own moral impulse in each individual, he always insisted that films' larger meanings should grow out of the recording of specific human experiences...
...Zones "C" and "D" north and west of Saigon, and portions of Binh Dinh and Quang Ngai in the central part of the country. In some villages an entire generation has grown up under communist rule. In some of these areas the VC-NLF has been able to develop a well-organized structure of government at the village and even district level...
Sensible as the tax sounds, few people outside the Administration like it. Industrialists claim that there is no way to curb emissions of sulfur oxides at a reasonable cost. Conservation groups, on the other hand, argue that the proposed tax is too low to force industry to develop improved "scrubbers" to remove sulfur from chimney gases. By their reckoning, it costs 190 for present devices to remove a pound of sulfur from fumes, while the proposed tax is only 100 to 150 per pound. As a result, they fear that industry would pay the tax rather than clean the fumes...