Word: flow
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...actually realize how much influence they do possess. Some years ago a colleague remarked to me that the top students determined the character of any given department. He may well have been correct. I have yet to know a scholar who did not respond in some fashion to the flow of written and oral arguments presented by good students. This situation provides the most significant opening for students who respond critically and negatively to the world about them. If they come to the faculty rigidly and dogmatically prepared to defend radical positions at all costs, they will get nowhere...
...TIME has brought in more than $80,000. Our purpose is to help alleviate an increasingly perplexing plight of big and small colleges: chronically short of advertising dollars, most cannot afford the kind of influential messages that will attract a diversity of students and faculty and a healthy flow of funds...
...directions. The result will be a cavity about 200 ft. in diameter; the surface of the earth will quake, but the AEC does not expect any radioactive debris to be vented into the atmosphere. Rock, melted by the explosion and lining the interior of the cavity, will flow down the walls, forming a pool at the bottom that will solidify into a glassy mass containing as much as 90% of the radioactive products of the A-blast. At the same time the roof of the cavern will begin to collapse, eventually forming a 440-ft. cavity filled with fractured copper...
...that depend heavily on dialogue, such as Saroyan's The Man with the Heart in the Highlands, which leads off the current show. But the medium is perfectly suited to such stylized theatrical forms as the Kabuki play The Tale of Kasane, which the group performs with the flow and precision of fine ballet. The company's most striking performances are its "recitations" of poetry. Through such simple gestures as twisting her fingers over her heart to show grief, stunning Audree Norton manages to evoke all the romantic passion contained in Elizabeth Barrett Browning...
Last week the pressures in the U.S. money market led the Bank of England to raise its interest rate from 5½% to 6%, hoping thus to stem a flow of funds toward the U.S. Though the British move steadied the sagging pound, it means that businessmen will have to pay more for loans to finance new plants and that consumers will pay more for installment purchases. Both consequences will tend to slow Britain's recovery from recession. Continental bankers predicted that the British action will lift the cost of short-term borrowing, but voiced guarded confidence that other...