Word: patterning
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Yorker find "what's happening", eat at a few restaurants, see some shows, look at hieroglyphics in the Metropolitan Museum and return to his rustic existence with some small change and a reinforced conviction that New York is indeed nice to visit but no place to live. This unfortunate pattern results largely from the fact that what is most interesting in New York is often most difficult to find, and the knack of living both well and at the same time inexpensively in this most varied and wealthy of cities is not easily acquired. The purpose here is not reiterate...
...hero of the film is a sort of Soviet Skippy named Seryozha, a small-town tot portrayed with shining innocence by Borya Barkhatov, age 5. Plotless but not without pattern, the picture develops by episodes and apparent diversions a quite subtle study of what a father's love and care and vigorous, manly example can mean to a growing...
Encephalitis (arborvirus-caused brain inflammation, more prevalent in Asia and Europe than in U.S.). Vaccines to date have been unsatisfactory or actually dangerous for man. Work is in progress on virus found in Malayan rodents in hopes that its protein overcoat will prove to be of a basic pattern that will trigger formation of antibodies against several close-kin viruses...
...publisher of Henry Miller's controversial novel said yesterday that the Massachusetts treatment of Tropic of Cancer was "the civilized exception" to a general pattern of unofficial harassment on the part of local police throughout the United States...
...stood near 6.8%. Superficially, the statistics had an encouraging side: the actual number of unemployed fell to 3,934,000 last month-the first time since October a year ago that the figure has dropped below 4,000,000. But a drop of this size is the normal seasonal pattern in October. Since unemployment is usually at its lowest in October, it promised to be a cold winter for a large part of the U.S. labor force...