Word: outwardly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...matchstick-model making at Kensington Palace, Britain's Princess Margaret, 30, showed a sample of her glittering new maternity wardrobe at a Fortune Theater performance of a satirical revue called Beyond the Fringe, which sniped at everything from the Establishment to Shakespeare. Predictably, the princess gave every outward indication of savoring the pungent aroma of roasted sacred...
...Ford's West German plant, and that some of them will be shipped in pieces for reassembly in other countries, including the U.S. The United Auto Workers, complaining about the export of U.S. jobs, worries about the Cardinal and fears that other U.S. automakers will make similar moves outward. As anyone can see, the day may not be far off when U.S. auto companies will produce parts for all their cars at whichever of their plants can turn them out most economically...
...every Frenchman's breast lurks a passion more potent, if possible, than his love of the franc or good food. Its outward and visible symbol is the bicycle, but the emotions that bicycling inspires in France have little to do with transportation or exercise. For priests, market-bound peasants, bankers who would sooner pedal than be chauffeured, bicycling is a way to dream and drift in dignity, to twirl life like a long-stemmed glass of Alsace wine. "Vive le vélo, un ami de l'homme" proclaims an affectionate Norman toast: "Long live the bike...
...take-offs and landings is an old technique, but few wings have ever had as many appendages as are planned for the 727. As the swift airliner slows for landing, its thin, swept-back wings will grow like opening umbrellas. On their leading edges small "Kreuger flaps" will tilt outward, making the wing effectively thicker and giving it extra lift. Simultaneously, a strange structure will slide out of the wing's trailing edge. Segmented flaps will move backward and downward, deflecting the air stream sharply and adding still more lift. Filling the angle between wing and fuselage, the huge...
WITH this week's issue, TIME'S subscribers will note the appearance of a new white address label on their copies. This is a small outward sign that a new electronic-tape subscription processing system, developed at TIME'S subscription-service division in Chicago, has gone into operation. The tape is geared in with a new highspeed label printer (131,000 an hour) that provides greater legibility and also shows readers when their sub scriptions expire. Month and year of expiration are now printed on the first line of the strip...