Word: precursors
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...year later, as the members of the Class of 1916 returned as seniors, Lowell extended the Christmas vacation. Hoping to make Harvard even more accessible to southerners and westerners he entrusted the administration of entrance exams to the College Entrance Board, the precursor of today's College Entrance Examination Board...
...enlivened magazine covers (Collier's, Harper's Weekly), made dull books popular, and helped turn Jell-O and Fisk tires into bestsellers by virtue of their ads; of chronic lung disease; in Plainfield, N.H. In 1964, with a retrospective show in Manhattan, Parrish was hailed as a precursor of pop art, and responded by saying: "How can these avant-garde people get anything out of me? I'm so hopelessly commonplace." Probably his most lasting single work, bought by John Jacob Astor in 1906 for $50,000, is a 30-ft. mural of King Cole...
...last summer-without saying who would lead the new department-and then gave every indication of not having made up his mind. He signed the bill on Sept. 9, and the department came into being on Nov. 9. While Weaver continued to head the Housing and Home Finance Agency, precursor of the new department, Johnson sifted through 300 possible appointees, leaned toward two or three who were apparently unavailable. Finally, he chose Weaver...
...forces, but they lacked the 20th century statistical tools to do the job, and they tended to concentrate on certain specialties. Adam Smith focused on the marketplace, Malthus on population, Ricardo on rent and land, Marx on labor and wages. Modern economists call those specializations "microeconomics"; Keynes was the precursor of what is now known as "macroeconomics"?from the Greek makros, for large or extended. He decided that the way to look at the economy was to measure all the myriad forces tugging and pulling at it?production, prices, profits, incomes, interest rates, government policies...
Rosenberg's parting selection originates from Norway to Mexico, from 1899 to 1962. From the looks of it, the revolution is not over. Pop art's precursor, Robert Rauschenberg, found a way to reproduce and overlap news photographs of lifeboat survivors and crowd scenes in his blue 1962 lithograph, Stunt Man I. Each of an edition of 37 now costs upwards of $200, if one can be found. Though no longer so cheap, graphics are still finer for many than are oils. There may be no end to Saint Jakob's ladder...