Search Details

Word: jealously (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Piri's visits to London were good preparation for writing this week's cover story on the swinging city. She drew more immediately on the work of seven staffers in our London bureau, as well as five U.S. and British photographers. They reported to the slightly jealous eyes of the editors in New York that the project involved four days of "the most concentrated swinging - discothéques, restaurants, art gallery and private parties, gambling, pub crawling - that any group of individuals has ever enjoyed or suffered, depending on your point of view...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Apr. 15, 1966 | 4/15/1966 | See Source »

...Riot! Riot!" It all started when two men-Joe Garcia, 26, a Mexican-American, and Dwayne Graves, 16, a Negro-bumped into each other outside a Watts liquor store. Between the Negro ghetto and the Mexican colony clustered in nearby East Los Angeles, there is a tradition of jealous rivalry, and tensions have been rising. Negroes, who resent the light-skinned Mexicans because they find it easier to get jobs, had stabbed several of their rivals in the previous riots. Mexicans, for their part, regard themselves as better-educated and racially superior to their Negro neighbors, whom they accuse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Los Angeles: Reprise of a Nightmare | 3/25/1966 | See Source »

...more and more comics. "People are a lot more hip about humor today," says Bob Hope. "People like their comedians to be current. We have to do the things they're reading about. De Gaulle, for example. One man against the world-he's jealous of the American and the Russian walk in space; he's still trying to walk on water...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: AMERICAN HUMOR: Hardly a Laughing Matter | 3/4/1966 | See Source »

...retiring for a decade to bear and rear children, and then making a comeback. Women need to think of "new patterns new combinations. Babies can be left in day nurseries." She is suspicious of successful women; she claims women's college presidents, who have achieved some success, are especially jealous of their positions, regard themselves as exceptional, and assure their students that "all women are not capable of combing careers and marriages...

Author: By Linda G. Mcveigh, | Title: Betty Freidan | 2/24/1966 | See Source »

Devoted professional women, then, are "jealous of their positions" and unwilling to help their sisters; but self-declared house-wives sell out, too. Mrs. Friedan cannot find any model for her "four-dimensional women." She disdains most American women because they settle for jobs as clerk-typists yet she blindly works for a millennium, a "human revolution...

Author: By Linda G. Mcveigh, | Title: Betty Freidan | 2/24/1966 | See Source »

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