Search Details

Word: inkley (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...focus of the story changes from Belle's village to the Beast's castle, the show grows simultaneously better and worse. The wolves that chase Belle's father Maurice (Grant Cowan) and the Beast himself (Fred Inkley) resemble the cast of Cats infinitely more than they look like vicious forest carnivores. In addition, while all of the living objects in the castle don exquisite costumes, their exaggerated gestures and facial expressions worth of Jim Carrey start out cute but quickly degenerate into irritating. They deserve props for being able to perform at all in such rigid costume designs, particularly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Disney Does Theater With Beauty | 7/10/1998 | See Source »

...constitutes a wetland, that is understandable. Before 1989, there was no official definition, and the four agencies that had jurisdiction over wetland development -- the Fish and Wildlife Service, the Army Corps of Engineers, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Agriculture -- often disagreed. Says the NWF's Douglas Inkley: "Sometimes the Corps would say one thing to a farmer, and a week later the EPA would come out and say something different...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War Over The Wetlands | 8/26/1991 | See Source »

When Carol Inkley went shopping for a new car earlier this year, she faced a supply-side problem: a pending divorce had left her with little to spend and nothing to trade in. Inkley, a Chesterfield, Mo., interior-design coordinator, solved her dilemma by signing a four-year auto lease that avoided the hefty down payment a normal car loan would have required. Cost of the lease: $239.04 a month. She drove home in a new white Honda CRX complete with automatic transmission, air conditioning and AM-FM radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Getting More Car for Less Cash | 5/18/1987 | See Source »

Taking a cue from Corporate America, more and more people these days are shopping for cars the same way that Inkley did. For decades automobile leasing has been popular among firms anxious to protect their cash flow and capital from the kind of rapid depreciation that car-fleet ownership entails. Now individual consumers are taking up the same practice for roughly similar reasons. Last year, according to the American Automotive Leasing Association (A.A.L.A.), a lobbying group, individual customers leased nearly 2 million of the 11.4 million new cars delivered in the U.S., a record. That 17% market share compares with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Getting More Car for Less Cash | 5/18/1987 | See Source »

Robert D. Hill '42, Frederick J. Hillman '44, Howard P. K. Hoddick '43, Ramer B. Holton '43, John W. Hursh '42, George B. Hutchison Jr. '44, Scott R. Inkley '43, Sidney C. Jackson '43, Jack H. James '43, Kenneth D. Johansen '43, Robert L. Judell '42, Walter B. Kamp '43, Harold Katz '43, Marvin M. Keirne...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 125 UPPERCLASSMEN RECEIVE $48,400 IN SCHOLARSHIPS | 11/21/1941 | See Source »

| 1 | 2 | Next