Word: feeling
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...intricately woven alto-sax solo, then came back strong and brassy, only to fade again before Marsala's languorous solo finish. Although some of the band members could scarcely reach the floor with their feet, they never lost the instinctive surefire phrasing that produces the big band feel. The audience gave them the first standing ovation in the festival's history. Said one jazzman: "I thought they would be good, but they're great...
...pocket and came home with goods in basket; now we go to market with money in basket and come home with goods in pocket," "If every man carried his cross, mighty few women would walk." To his students he growled: "When you leave this room I want you to feel that you have learned something. Don't go out and just develop a personality...
Birdwhistell finds that a TV performer's body is often more outspoken than the spiel itself. "People, even actors," he says, "can't act well enough not to send some signals of their true feelings about what they're doing. This is what protects us from the Big Brother world. Of the multiple of messages, Madison Avenue has learned to control only a very few. Advertisers are just not that clever. My colleagues and I feel a strong ethical sense that it's our job to make sure the public knows as much about the subject...
...closed, blank façade facing the street; the new U.S. embassy will be open and inviting, with neither walls, fences nor closed façade obstructing the view into the interior court. "The building will be approachable, and thus democratic," said Gropius. "The visitor will not feel the impact of authority, but will enter the building as a free...
...full employment. But he also agreed with the growing body of economists who think that the cost of doing this might be greater than the price of bearing inflation for a while, since the new inflation is a natural result of the economy's continuing prosperity. They feel that severe cures would hurt even more than the malady itself. Says Harvard Economist Sumner Slichter, who predicts a controlled inflation of 2% to 3% annually for the next decade: "In this imperfect world we are often compelled to choose between evils, and if the choice is between enough unemployment...