Word: growingly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...thinking of the pool tall in Brooklyn where he had pushed his first flipper, never dreaming that someday he would be standing on the brink of greatness. He was thinking of his mother and father, who more than anything else in the world had wanted their little boy to grow up to be a pinball champion...
...future of SDS, Booth predicted that it will either grow very quickly in the near future or else "be smashed by the government." "The Left in the United States," he explained, "expects to be on the defensive, and that is exactly what the government wants. They are keeping us busy defending our tactics so that our message of protest is never allowed to be heard as an alternative...
...Communist Party itself is the largest of the radical left organizations today. Our youth section is the largest single group of youth in a radical organization -- we are neither small nor irrelevant, as our enemies claim we are. However, we feel that we still must grow considerably in order to be able to play a more decisive role, as people engage more and more in movements for political change. Our own club began around November 1962, and has grown by several factors since its inception. The average age of our members is 21, and our membership is both campus...
...easy to see why she fascinates a daring young psychiatrist (John Cullum) who wants to frogleap Freud into the mental future. After all, she knows his phone is ringing before it rings, and she can grow plants faster than Jack's beanstalk by singing nicely to them. She sings nicely to the audience, too, especially in Burton Lane's best song, What Did I Have That I Don't Have?, a wistful identity query in which Daisy wonders why the good doctor dotes on her 18th century self. In other numbers, Lane's score improves Lerner...
...reason: the end of the buildup of steel inventories, which has already pushed steel output down to 75% of capacity. There is also the possibility that the nation's industries, now operating at well over 90% of capacity, will be pushed into expanding faster than their markets can grow. If that happens-and economists disagree strongly over whether it is likely-operating rates could decline next year and create a squeeze on profits. Or the profit figures, which seem to have a will of their own, could fool everyone again...