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

...Alfonso inherited the family's dread hemophilia; after an auto accident in Florida in 1938, he bled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spain: Toward a Change | 6/22/1962 | See Source »

...wringer. But the convulsion that swept the stock market cost millions of Americans dear in anticipated profits, and particularly the amateurs among "small investors" who put their money into the market at or near its peak and sold out at last week's low. Not since the dread year of 1929 had trading been so heavy (average daily volume: 10,000,000 shares) or the ticker tape lagged so late. Before the week was over, delays of an hour or more in the tape became routine, and one night the final Dow-Jones averages were not calculated until five...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Wall Street: The Professionals Take Over | 6/8/1962 | See Source »

Trustbusters' Target. The manufacturing and the selling of cars are only part of the strain. Because G.M. has made itself so big, it must live in constant dread of the Justice Department's trustbusters. Since last summer, the Antitrust Division has assigned a special team of eight attorneys to keep watch on the giant automaker. The Government already has four antitrust cases against G.M. in pretrial stages: 1) a criminal indictment charging that the company has monopolized the diesel electric locomotive market by unfair use of its power as the railroads' largest freight customer; 2) a suit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Autos: Product of the System | 5/18/1962 | See Source »

Justice has been slow in coming to the Dominican Republic. Of the several thousand members of Trujillo's dread S.I.M. (Military Intelligence Service), only a handful are under arrest; not one has been tried. The rest have either been permitted to slip into exile or are openly walking the streets; some are still on active duty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dominican Republic: Chambers of Horror | 4/13/1962 | See Source »

...Williams is full of similar moral ambivalence. His oppressive, superheated tropics are Poe's "ghoul-haunted woodland of Weir," and his characters some times seem like Poe's spectral phantoms of a locked-in ego, walking somnambulically to their dooms. Williams shares Melville's somber cosmic dread. It was of the Encantadas, the desolate islands of the Galapagos, that Melville wrote: "In no world but a fallen one could such lands exist." And it is "on the beach of the Encantadas" that Sebastian, the poet of Suddenly Last Summer, who later would himself be eaten...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: The Angel of the Odd | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

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