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

...meets students in the Houses, Radcliffe must offer something similar to create Faculty-student relations. It cannot hope to venture into extensive programs of individually directed study as Sarah Lawrence did; it cannot adopt a highly student-centered curriculum; it can only cut Harvard's cloth to its own pattern...

Author: By Stephen F. Jencks, | Title: Radcliffe's Revolution | 10/18/1961 | See Source »

...assume that history has a pattern would imply that future history could be predicted. The day when this will be possible is almost "indescribably remote," Purcell said. When it does come, most of our present conceptions about history's pattern will probably be proven wrong...

Author: By J. MICHAEL Crichton, | Title: Purcell Says Science Laws Are Misused | 10/16/1961 | See Source »

What does the changing U.S. jobography mean? For one thing, says Wolfbein, "we may see less of the classic pattern of job hunters flooding into the North from the South." For another, the shift shows the momentum of the force that creates chronic-unemployment areas when industry moves out-a problem that no one yet fully understands how to remedy. And it points up the need to explain the story of the new industrial map to the rapidly growing horde of new workers, so that a Southern boy training to be a die cutter will realize that he does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: State of Business: Where the Jobs Are | 10/13/1961 | See Source »

...this encouraged the growing belief among economic policymakers-from "conservative" Federal Reserve Board Chairman William McChesney Martin Jr. to "liberal" Chief Presidential Economist Walter Heller-that the nation can have prosperity as well as stable prices. If so, that would contradict the inflationary pattern of previous postwar recoveries (see chart). But, as Treasury Under Secretary Robert Roosa says, "this recovery period is different from all others...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: State of Business: Going Steady | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

...plus a graceful fivesome of wheels by Ettore Colla. kookie, pedigree. One ancestor is Picasso, who in 1912 painted a cubist picture of ordinary objects, threw in the letters J O U (to indicate journal, and hence day-to-day experience), pasted on some oilcloth with a chair-cane pattern, and finally framed the whole thing with a piece of rope. Picasso was creating no ordinary still life: he arranged his painted objects just as the later assemblers were to arrange their actual objects-not as nature would have them, but in accordance with a wholly subjective association...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Flight from Approval | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

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