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Word: outlooks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...varsity will oppose Army at West Point on April 18. If the varsity can get by the Cadets, the outlook will brighten considerably. Of course, Yale has already produced a 48.0 quarter by Jim Stack, a 1:53.5 half-mile by Tommy Carroll, and a 3:14.7 mile relay, but it's spring and anything can happen...

Author: By Michael S. Lottman, | Title: LINING THEM UP | 4/8/1959 | See Source »

...Trottenberg, in a new and commendable deviation from the ways of his Puritan predecessors, has now decided that the draft-induced chills of those who live in the older Yard dormitories are no longer necessary to produce a properly studious outlook...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Santayana's Bathtub | 4/7/1959 | See Source »

...late Ernst Emil Wiechert (1887-1950) was one of the last of a vanished breed of German writers-romantic in feeling, mystical in outlook, spendthrift in prose (in his 63 years he wrote 60 books, none of them very well known in the U.S.). When Hitler came to power, Wiechert backed one of the dictator's most detested internal enemies, Lutheran Pastor Martin Niemoller, and paid for it with five months in Buchenwald concentration camp followed by years of enforced silence. Tidings, Wiechert's posthumous novel (first published in Germany in 1953) is the fruit of his musings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: To Begin Again | 4/6/1959 | See Source »

Senator Thomas John Dodd has praised Mr. John Foster Dulles for his unchanging outlook and foreign policy. He said that "flexibility implies compromise and concession | TIME, March 9] ... Have we forgotten the lessons of the Hitler era, with its compromises, concessions and flexibilities?" He belabors his point too far. There is a difference between yielding to Hitler's every wish, and allowing a foreign policy to change as the world situation changes-and the world changes over six years or fourteen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Mar. 30, 1959 | 3/30/1959 | See Source »

...arena at the Charles Playhouse is set by Robert G. Skinner with a few solid, bare beams, evocative of Puritan living conditions and symbolic of the strong, harsh, undecorated, uneuphemistic outlook of the Puritan soul. To some degree this is Mr. Miller's outlook too, and according to it he has made a sturdy play, admirable in many aspects and intermittently powerful...

Author: By Julius Novick, | Title: The Crucible | 3/25/1959 | See Source »

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