Word: growingly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Dunster House Committee last night started a battle over Dartmouth week-end dances that may grow as heated as the game. Rejecting the assignments of the inter-House social committee, Dunster voted to hold a Dartmouth dance despite the fact that Lowell and Adams had previously been granted rights for the date. Dunster was given the Brown dance...
Harsh Words. By the laws of Communist meteorology, when Soviet-Yugoslav relations get warmer, Soviet-Chinese relations automatically grow more turbulent. Last week the Red Chinese and their distant Albanian allies renewed their blistering criticism of Tito and that "modern revisionist," Khrushchev. Peking was especially angry over Tito's interview with Columnist Pearson, in which Tito called the Chinese warmongers. Rising to Peking's defense, the Albanians lashed out at Khrushchev for agreeing to sell MIG jet fighters to India, for possible use against "innocent" Chinese...
...looks on the surface, at any rate, and he has so often been cast as "himself"-he was even called Marcello in Dolce Vita-that he went eagerly for his role as a Sicilian nobleman in Divorce-Italian Style, which gave him a chance to grease down his hair, grow a mustache, and decay even more. But the man himself is nothing like the prototype his appearance symbolizes. Whereas he zealously chased a great-bosomed movie star (Anita Ekberg) in Dolce Vita, he fled when a great-bosomed movie star (Brigitte Bardot) recently chased him in real life. They were...
...future, the retailing problem may grow. For if it succeeds in wooing younger drivers, who generally crave frequent, thoroughgoing model changes, AMC may be forced to choose between its new public and its resistance to extensive restyling. AMC hopes to stick with its basic '63 styling for at least three years. Says Cross: "We haven't opened Pandora's box." Nor has the company any hankering to stray outside the compact field. "The most rapidly expanding part of the auto market today is the compact segment," says President Abernethy. "It currently accounts for 38% of the market...
...Taylor's underlying point is that the desperate, furious myth-making of the period 1820-1860 was the product of a social order increasingly aware of its failure to grow and mature, and increasingly fearful that "Yankees" would exploit that failure. (Is such myth-making in itself a sign of the dissolution of a society? Taylor does not say so, but I think he suggests that the question, at least, is a reasonable one.) Taylor's Prologue consists of a description of the fascinating and wide-ranging correspondence which ex-Presidents Adams and Jefferson carried on for ten years prior...