Word: limelighted
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...passed word that it might well usher in a new era in labor relations. That is just what many businessmen-and union chiefs-are afraid of. Arthur Goldberg is not a man to let the headlines go by, and the steel negotiators are miffed because he hogged the limelight and made it appear as if the Kennedy Administration alone was responsible for bringing statesmanship to steel. Growled the American Metal Market: "Free collective bargaining, which has been on the way out the window, may have gone all the way." At the Pittsburgh press conference where the tentative agreement was announced...
From his reception at the White House through the rain-soaked ride up Pennsylvania Avenue, Glenn acted as though he had been in the limelight all his life. He flashed a grin reminiscent of Eisenhower's, turned his head in every direction for the crowds like a campaigning Kennedy. Perched on the back seat of the President's bubble-top Lincoln, he ignored the dismal drizzle, kept a protective left arm around his radiant wife Annie, and occasionally thrust out his other arm to shake the hand of daring youngsters who darted through the police lines...
...necessity, the openness with which the U.S. conducts its space shoots has put Shorty Powers in the limelight, too. He would be the last to mind. Well aware of his role, he cultivates the deep, composed voice that, to a tense world last week, suggested that the nation's first attempt at manned orbit was no more critical than a takeoff from Idlewild. "I must not raise my voice," says Shorty Powers. "I must give the people an objective report without any display of emotion. Millions will be hanging on my every word.'' As a matter...
Because it holds a double limelight of academic prestige and well-publicized contact with Washington, Harvard faces serious temptation, and perhaps pressure, to accept the government's line that everyone should build shelters. It can make the current investigation just a study of costs and convenient locations, concluding with some construction and an announcement that Harvard is the first university to give its members safety...
...role as reporter, if not as upholder of taste, the museum could hardly have ignored the movement. For the last few years, the assemblers have been taking a bigger and bigger share of the limelight from the abstractionists. Their purpose is to free art from its own limitations by rejecting any dependence on traditional materials-the painter's oils, the sculptor's bronze. Assemblers believe that art can be found in any facet or aspect of everyday life. They scour attics, dumps, and shops to find objects that catch their fancy. They arrange these objects without any regard...