Word: endeavoring
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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THERE is a new, privileged, spotlighted, envied group in the U.S. It is composed of "the singles"-the young unmarried whose label connotes, as in tennis, an endeavor more vigorous, more skilled and more fun than mere doubles. Proportionately, there are fewer singles in the population than there were 20 years ago, because young Americans are tending to marry at an earlier age. But they are the focus of a major part of advertising and salesmanship, the direct target of new approaches in housing and entertainment, the considerable despair of some established institutions, and the apostolate of a freer code...
...London housewife whose 24 in.-by-20 in. abstract won first prize last week at the Royal Society of Arts in the nonobjective category of a competition sponsored by the popular Sunday newspaper The People. Explained Mrs. Jeanes, mother of a 15-year-old daughter: "The abstract was my endeavor to depict life from the fetus to infinity, and the struggle for the first breath of life. The section of rectangles indicates the cut-and-dried life one might hope to live, passing on to life's trials, which are reality, painted in brilliant colors. The small white sections...
...Fellows program is just as experimental as the rest of the Institute's endeavor. Intensively experimental, with all the characteristics thereof: disorganization, gaps, trial-and-error on the one hand; innovation, excitement, freedom on the other. And we don't yet know the results. The returns aren't in; the experiment continues...
...President unveiled sketchy blueprints for the bridges in Arco, Idaho, last August, when he urged that Washington and Moscow embark on a "common endeavor" toward peaceful cooperation. In New York six weeks later, he went further, describing "a reconciliation with the East" as "one of the great unfinished tasks of our generation." Since then, the President has eased trade restrictions on the export of more than 400 nonstrategic items to Eastern Europe, approved the opening of a Moscow-New York air route, put discreet pressure on congressional leaders to approve a long-pending agreement to open consular offices in selected...
...very location was lost until 1709, when monks in Resina, a city superimposed by chance on Herculaneum's grave, uncovered some marble theater seats while sinking a well. Other diggers plundered Herculaneum of everything their tunnels exposed. "It is one of the tragic ironies of human endeavor," writes Deiss, "that the suffocating mud did less damage to Herculaneum than the earliest excavators...