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

...Distressing as it may be to A.T. & T. the sale of offbeat handsets is booming. Two companies in New York City account for most of a fast-moving retail and mail order business in rebuilt foreign antiques and reproductions, equipped with dials and plug-ins to fit a phone company jack (Jacqueline Kennedy has one on a 19th century Victorian table in her White House office). Also popular are American antiques-wood-cabinet wall phones and the stand-up type that went out in the late '30s, known in the telephone trade as "the Eliot Ness." Newest dodge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Telephone: Something is Calling | 11/8/1963 | See Source »

...shell-case buttons; a polar-bear parka for $2,000; a pleated shooting culotte with snake-proof boots for huntresses with pretty knees; a silver hair-seal parka with hair-seal skates to match; and to keep warmer still-the chicest, sleekest flask, called Little Nipper, designed to fit on the sveltest hip and never make an unintended bulge. The response was enough to warm even a trout fisherman's clam my boots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fashion: The Sporty Look | 11/1/1963 | See Source »

...Charles Long II has invented a way of extending the microscope's eye and putting it into the patient-as far as a hypodermic needle will go. Heart of the system is a pair of tiny bundles containing 10,000 glass fibers, so fine that they fit inside the needle. One bundle carries light into the patient. The other bundle picks up light that is reflected from the tissue under study and carries it back to the microscope, which is attached to the needle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Instruments: For Heart, Home & Hospital | 11/1/1963 | See Source »

Santayana did, and his reputation eventually rivaled James's. But most of James's contemporaries agreed that Santayana was a fellow who just did not fit in. Born in Spain and brought up in Boston, he was never really at home in Europe or the U.S. At a time when philosophy was robustly assured, Santayana remained a quiet skeptic. Other philosophers wrote a brisk, matter-of-fact style; Santayana wrote a highly poetic one. They were aggressively liberal and believed in the inevitability of progress; Santayana was a hermitlike conservative who yearned for tradition, a settled order...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Cool World | 11/1/1963 | See Source »

...either House, and there is little evidence that any more progress will be made before a few more months have elapsed. Civil rights, and a host of other important problems, offered the 88th Congress a splendid chance to rebut the charges that America's legislature is no longer a fit place for the transaction of America's business. But as bill after bill has become mired in committees and in subcommittees, in party wrangling or in intra-party politics, Congress has missed its chance...

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

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