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

...well as a ship, and that journey goes willfully off course. What is missing is the tragic sense. Captain Ahab is an authentic tragic hero; Welles makes him merely a monomaniac of vengeance. In book and play, Ahab speaks of the "malice inscrutable" of the White Whale. His mate Starbuck, the voice of reason, reminds him that "a poor dumb thing" can have no malice. What Welles fails to grasp is that it is the inscrutability that maddens Ahab, for Moby Dick is the universal mystery of things as they are. When Ahab probes with his lance for the great...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Captain Bligh Swaps Ships | 12/7/1962 | See Source »

...John A. Volpe. In Connecticut, former Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Abraham Ribicoff, long touted as the greatest Democratic vote getter in the state's history, had his troubles beating Republican Representative Horace Seely-Brown Jr. in the senatorial race. Ex-Governor Ribicoff ran far behind his ticket mate, Democratic Governor John Dempsey, who appealed to the- voters to "please give me your prayers." Dempsey's Republican opponent, Insurance Man John Alsop, made a point of telling campaign audiences about Dempsey's wonderful smile-while warning them not to believe in it. As it turned out, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The States: New England's Lesson | 11/16/1962 | See Source »

...Governors in the U.S. whose plurality did not shrink from the previous election. Hatfield was just too much for Democratic State Attorney General Robert Thornton, who never had a chance. But Hatfield missed another sort of chance: he gave only the most tepid support to a weak G.O.P. ticket mate, Senate Candidate Sig Unander, who did well in losing to Democrat Wayne Morse. If popular Mark Hatfield had gone all-out for Unander, he might have helped rid the U.S. Senate of its windiest member...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Oregon: Missed Chance | 11/16/1962 | See Source »

...Chief Machinist's Mate Richard McKenna was the very model of a seagoing sailor; he had joined the Navy during the Depression, served 22 years on everything from a river gunboat in China to a destroyer off Korea. In 1953 McKenna suddenly deep-sixed the old salt image. Stumbling on Walden, he felt that his mind had been "in a deep freeze," decided to retire and become a writer. An old skipper charted his new course: go to the University of North Carolina, a good place for "a man with a purpose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: A Place for Purpose | 11/16/1962 | See Source »

...intentions, but could hardly have invested so much in another aerospace company simply to diversify his holdings. More logically, ultimate merger appears desirable in an industry where no single producer can muster all the scientific capabilities needed to occupy a commanding place in space. Douglas would make a good mate. It offers a large write-off against future taxes. Due largely to development costs on its DC-8 jetliner, its 1959-60 deficits totaled $52 million. Douglas is the contractor for the nation's first airborne ballistic missile, the Skybolt, and for the Saturn moon rocket booster. In addition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aerospace: McDonnell's Second Stage | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

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