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

...nature. His head had to be a perfect oval like the egg, his eyes were to be curved like lotus petals, his lips to have the fullness of the mango. As Buddhism spread, every new artist took his cue from such traditions, even to the extent of making exact copies of what had , gone before. But the creative spirit could not be bound: each civilization added something...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Theme & Gentle Variations | 6/7/1963 | See Source »

Competition's tropical-like growth stems mostly from the new economy's technological explosion, which is rapidly outmoding the methods, machines and products of only yesterday. Courtlandt Gross, 58, chairman of Lockheed Aircraft, the nation's biggest defense contractor, loses exact count of the division-strength army that Lockheed now uses to devise new products and processes to keep ahead of competitors-but the number runs to 13.000 or 14.000 scientists and engineers. Says Gross: "I suspect there's more science and engineering in a button today than there was 20 years ago." In, steel, Europe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: New & Exuberant | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

...studios of the center are shielded from direct sunlight by concrete breakers. The exact positioning of these visors is not duplicated in any previous Le Corbusier work but is vaguely similar to those used in the government buildings of Chandigarh, India, and in designs for a proposed construction in Algiers which was never realized...

Author: By R. R., | Title: The Architectural Origins Of the Carpenter Center | 5/22/1963 | See Source »

Some Houses might experiment with loosening residence requirements. The exact pattern of change in individual Houses is not so important as the determination to use the strength of the Houses is a basis for serious and sharp innvotion. Otherwise Radcliffe will be only the first to discover that the Harvard Houses have been left behind in the age that is past...

Author: By Stephen F. Jeneka, | Title: Coeducation and Monasticism in the Houses | 5/21/1963 | See Source »

...next step was to search the car rental agencies in West Berlin for a sports car small enough to slip under the beam. He finally decided on an Austin Healey Sprite, which, without its windshield, measured 35½ in. high. Meixner confided in another young Austrian, gave him an exact timetable of his plans and asked him to prevent any cars on the Western side from starting into the barrier area at the critical moment. At last, when his plans were complete. Meixner drove his little sports car back into East Berlin to Margarete's house. Margarete crouched...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Berlin: Two Inches to Safety | 5/17/1963 | See Source »

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