Word: distinctively
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
There are two other policies, adopted at the HDC's first meeting in 1908 which have been kept constant throughout the Club's history. One of these was the decision to have women play women's roles. This caused "distinct opposition at the outset and wavering in the fold," Baker remarked several years later, but the members have always stuck to the original decision. H. V. Kaltenborn '09, a charter member and the first treasurer of the Club, remembered that at the time "I was very happy they decided to be sensible" and adopt this policy. "There was a very...
Captain Ted Metropoulos of the 1956 eleven told the audience that "it was a distinct privilege to play the Ivy brand of football," and extended his best wishes to Tom Hooper, captain-elect of next year's team...
...issue after issue, the Democratic party has differed sharply with Republican proposals and, more important, with the Republican philosophy that a minimum of government is most desirable. In spite of the obvious existence of a distinct Democratic program and philosophy, Senator Johnson has maintained his wait-and-see-what-Ike-says attitude. He has, in addition, ignored the fact that the voters gave the Democrats a majority in the legislative branch of the government. The victory was a clear mandate for the Democrats to enact the program on which they campaigned...
...letter dated Aug. 24. 1954. the day after an interim report to the nation by the President: "Just a note to thank you and your staff for the extraordinary cooperation that you gave to my staff and me in the telecast from your studio last evening. It was a distinct pleasure to have the opportunity to meet you. Very sincerely, Dwight D. Eisenhower...
There are, it is true, several distinct advantages to TV, some of which were enumerated above. Perhaps the chief of these lies in television's ability to magnify lecture demonstrations which would otherwise be difficult or impossible to see. In this capacity, television has become an important adjunct to dental education. A demonstration involving the drilling of a tooth, for example, could ordinarily be observed by only a few students. But television allows an almost unlimited number to view the operation, and view it better than the students who originally had to crowd around the chair. Television, in effect, makes...