Word: rivale
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Before . . . . . . . . . . Dem. 49 Rep. 47 Seats at stake . . . . . . . Dem. 13 Rep. 21 Lost to rival party . . . . Dem. none Rep. 13 After...
Before . . . . . . . . . . Dem. 235 Rep. 200 Seats at stake . . . . . . . all Lost to rival party . . . . Dem. 1 Rep. 47* After...
Before . . . . . . . . . . Dem. 29 Rep. 19 Seats at stake . . . . . . . Dem. 19 Rep. 13 Lost to rival party . . . . Dem. 4 Rep. 8† After...
...before income taxes, huge spendable resources. They bought widely, and sometimes competitively with one another. In the space of a generation, Andrew Mellon, P.A.B. Widener, Henry Clay Frick, and lesser financial titans transformed the U.S. from a cultural have-not to a treasure house of great art that could rival Europe's best (see color pages...
...dozen other new novels. The salient feature of this season's supply of advertising and public-relations fiction, all written more or less from the inside, is that people, plots and other parts are virtually interchangeable. If ad fiction can become plentiful and anesthetic enough, it may yet rival science fiction: the bug-eyed monsters will be replaced by tyrannical clients, the clean-cut spacemen by bright-eyed space-buyers, and the half-dressed blondes by other half-dressed blondes...