Word: dreaming
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Dean Elder's encouragement of marriage among graduate students is laudable. But the means that he is using seem ill-adjusted to the problem which is babies and not wives. Since most married student's wives work, life for the married, but babyless, can be a dream. But with the arrival of progeny, the wife's income is cut short, and expenses are increased by at least $700 per baby per year: offered $300 by the college, the student now needs perhaps...
...lost markets. We helped the lowest-income people in agriculture. We brought social security for the first time to operators of family farms. We refunded to farmers the $60 million-a-year federal tax on farm gasoline. We started the great St. Lawrence Seaway project-the 30-year dream of Midwestern farm families . . . And we turned prices back up-without...
There is less magic in the minor fare offered by the Royal Danes-Graduation Ball is even more giddy than Ballet Theater's version; Dream Pictures is a pointless period piece that does, however, include a hilarious dance by three doddering octogenarian couples. While it is at the Met, the company will offer the first U.S. performances of Romeo and Juliet, with the Prokofiev score and new choreography by Frederick Ashton. Then it will visit ten cities in the eastern U.S. and Canada to give more Americans a chance to see ballet storyful, mellow and magical...
...change his basic image of the regime as a harsh and depriving force."This propaganda poster was pinned on a Moscow school's bulletin board. The large letters say "I could not study, so I sold newspapers." In small print it goes on to say: "Study is an unattainable dream for children living in capitalist countries. In such large countries as America, England, and France, one must pay for tuition and therefore almost no new schools are ever built. In Africa, in the southern regions of the Sudan, there is only one school student per 2,000 children. In Indonesia...
...have no thought of fatigue; I shall do another picture this very night, and I shall bring it off. I have a terrible lucidity at moments when nature is so beautiful; I am not conscious of myself any more, and the pictures come to me as in a dream...