Word: flatted
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...When the magazine does not publish, the Fund will send out a small pamphlet called Forum. Forum is not a fundraising appeal, he says, but a brief, more personal profile of a member of the faculty. Five or six times each year, the Fund will also send out a "flat, outright appeal," he says. Recent alumni surveys showed that 83 per cent of the alumni felt "quite favorable" about their experience here and only 5 or 6 per cent were "really anti-Harvard." But, Peterson says, the problem remains in getting many of these potential donors to give, even...
After an even second period in which each team scored twice the older Buds went flat. The Kings are made up of area college graduates and their skating fizzled in the third period...
...REBATES. The biggest item is $7 billion to $11 billion in rebates on 1976 personal income taxes. Charles Schultze, Carter's nominee as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, says that a "fairly flat" sum will probably be adopted for all income groups, though the precise figure has not yet been determined. Obviously, if everybody gets a $100 or $200 rebate, people with lower incomes stand to benefit the most proportionately. Social Security recipients are expected to receive a one-shot boost in their benefits similar to the $50 they gained from the 1975 tax cut package...
...Asia." Unhappily, says Rosemary, he often sprinted after other women. At 28, she packed up her two daughters and took off for London, there to try the flamboyant high-and-low life her heroines always have a fling at. One day a middle-aged multimillionaire offered her a fancy flat in Paris and a huge allowance, but Rosemary had already fallen for a black G.I. named Leroy Rogers. "He was the first man," she recalls, "who made me feel like a real woman...
...Fini? In such company, artists like Georgia O'Keeffe, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Kathe Kollwitz, Nataliia Goncharova and Sonia Delaunay look extraordinary; one's eye goes with relief to Goncharova's crude, provincial but raucously vital cubist portrait of her husband Mikhail Larionov (1913), the face kippered flat and streaked with voracious slashes of color; it luxuriates in the shimmer of rosy light, circle on circle, that fills the surface of Delaunay's masterpiece of 1916, The Flamenco Singer. Moreover, if the exhibition does seem to end on a dying fall, it hardly matters. What counts...