Word: expressive
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Change of Heart. Last week the second six months was up, and Boyce gave every indication of renewing Hewitt's ostracism. "Tyrants in Overalls," cried London's big Daily Express. "The tyranny among Ron Hewitt's mates is as wicked as any that ever caused workers to form a union...
...Buffalo COURIER-EXPRESS...
Allport added that if a survey were taken of the schools and factories, particularly in the South, which have been desegregated, many of the workers would express dissatisfaction with the new system. "Nonetheless, the majority of these people do not actively express their dissatisfaction and soon they get along quite well," Allport said...
...Covent Garden. The melodramatic plot (of amorous scheming and betrayal in ancient Troy) was lusty, but the heavily sweet music resembled Walton's lyrical Viola Concerto more than his uproarious Belshazzar's Feast. The London Times called it "a great tragic opera," and the Daily Express hailed "the proudest hour for British music since the premiere of Benjamin Britten's Peter Grimes." Sir William made his own evaluation: "It won't please the highbrows . . . no atonal stuff." Moreover, he liked opera so much that he was off violin sonatas and string quartets for a while. Said...
...many to be the outstanding U.S. clergyman under 50, an expert in both theology and diplomacy. President Blake broke into one of the Boston sessions to announce "the illness, the serious illness of His Holiness, Pope Pius XII," and the delegates stood for one minute bowed in prayer to express their "sympathy for their Roman Catholic friends...