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

...rights bill. Even for his usual, tenuous 8-to-7 majority on the House Rules Committee, Mr. Kennedy is indebted to two liberal Southerners, who can be expected to oppose the rights measure. Thus, unless the votes of two committee Republicans can be won over, the bill may die in the hearing room, or at least be seriously delayed again. Consider that Rep. Halleck thinks some of the sections of the subcommittee's bill "would be most difficult for me to support," consider that Sen. Dirksen finds portions of even the weaker bill unpalatable, and it is easy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Congress and the Rights Bill | 10/28/1963 | See Source »

When newspapers die, they die suddenly. The death of the New York Mirror last week was no exception. The paper passed so swiftly into oblivion that even its own staff was taken by surprise, and the last issue was trapped forever in a host of minor ironies. On page 6, a series on Frank Sinatra promised another installment; on page 31, readers were asked, as usual, to send questions to the Mirror's "You Said It!" column and were offered the customary $10 reward. Only in a black-bordered announcement on page 2, under the heading MIRROR CEASES PUBLICATION...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Shattered Mirror | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

After his triumphant debut at Bayreuth last summer in a new production of Die Meistersinger, Schippers was offered the directorship of two European opera houses-a temptation that sorely tries him. "Conducting is not enough for me," he says. "I need a theater-a theater is the way I can express myself best. I want to live in the dirt of the theater." The dirt is denied him at the Met, where conductors have no responsibility for staging or direction, but Schippers is too much at home there now to leave easily. "I feel that the Met is my orchestra...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Opera: The Schippers Festival | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

...their annual assembly, the International Convention of Christian Churches, as the Disciples style themselves, could claim, with 1,800,000 members, to be one of the nation's largest indigenous religious bodies. But the Disciples still try to live by Barton Stone's belief that sects should "die, be dissolved, and sink into union with the body of Christ at large." The Disciples are one of six faiths seriously discussing Presbyterian Eugene Carson Blake's proposal to create a great new superchurch that would be both "catholic and Reformed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Protestants: Worried Disciples | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

...anchovy and a morsel of bread a day." As a medical student, Keats knew long before this that he was as good as dead anyway. He struggled to make his death easier for Joseph Severn, the kind but ineffectual painter who nursed him. Severn had never seen anyone die. Keats punned "a hundred times a day" and made jokes to divert him. "Severn," he gasped when the final moment came, "lift me up-I am dying." Then he added reassuringly, "Don't be afraid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Chameleon Poet | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

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