Word: fixedly
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...questions answer themselves. Any attempt to fix boundaries [to] intellectual adventure . . . would return us to an animal existence...
Jimmy's father, a Boston Irishman, wanted his son to become a plumber. ("I can still fix a toilet," says Jimmy.) Instead, he got what he thought was a wonderful job as office boy at the Boston Opera House: "There must have been 50 pianos!" With 50 pianos to tinkle on, he began making up his own tunes...
...desert camp site is only partly excavated, and still may be hiding a lot of answers archeologists would like to know. If Harrington finds bones of animals around the ancient hearths, he will be better able to fix the date of the "Pinto culture." Bones of American camels, or long-horned bison, for instance, would prove that the camp site was inhabited in the late glacial period. If he finds a fair set of human bones, he may establish Pinto Man's relation to other Early Americans, and to the latter-day low-cultured Indians who lived in Southern...
...Alley publishers are already thinking about grinding up five other songs he wrote (Nature Boy is one of a suite of six). They don't always like his lyrics, but they can fix that. Sample (from Brother Song...
...National Hockey League's present fortunes are guided by a tightlipped, teetotaling bachelor lawyer named Clarence S. Campbell, who made news a fortnight ago when he cracked down on a couple of players involved in a gambling fix (TIME, March 22). For love of hockey, Campbell ditched a profitable law practice for three years to referee big-league games. In September 1946, he was made N.H.L.'s president, given a $15,000 salary, a spacious office in league headquarters in Montreal. Campbell wants more clubs, more arenas. Says he: "It's an awfully good game...