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Word: scopes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...long-term value of today's research in his Cleveland Clinic laboratories. This is true of the work on heart-and-artery disease that is being pressed in scores of U.S. laboratories: the field is too new. However, there is solid ground for hope in the very scope of the effort now being made. The American Heart Association pays out $5,000,000 a year in research grants-half of it for basic science. Even more ambitious is the National Heart Institute's program. It is only seven years since the Public Health Service launched the institute with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Specialized Nubbin | 10/31/1955 | See Source »

Phillips Brooks House is a prime example of an organization that has received too little from the drive. Paradoxically, while the scope and membership of Brooks House have expanded, its share of Combined Charities has sharply declined. The social service house began a new program with virtually no members in 1945, built to 400 in 1950, and rose to an all-time high last year of 825 from the College and another 125 from Radcliffe. Although Brooks House has extended its programs into prisons, mental hospitals, tutoring, and boys' clubs, its income has fallen from a high...

Author: By John G. Wofford, | Title: Declined Charities | 10/27/1955 | See Source »

Balancing the two novelties on the program was Beethoven's Trio No. 4, a very early work, which has much of the scope of Beethoven's later chamber works without their unity and continuity. Its effects, such as a too close imitation in the adagio, do not show the later Beethoven's sense of pace. This trio was handsomely and forcefully played by violinist David Hurwitz, cellist Walter Wheeler, and pianist Landon Young. They provided fine musicianship in a concert otherwise interesting only for its instrumental novelty...

Author: By Michael Praetorius, | Title: Chamber Music | 10/26/1955 | See Source »

...young businessmen, Humbert Frerejean and Didier Rémon. Frerejean, then 31, was working in the personnel department of a steel concern, and Rémon, then 24, with a management consultant. They originally planned a FORTUNE-style magazine for French business, but Réaltiés' scope was soon broadened under Editor Max, 41. A onetime French wire service correspondent, Max studied U.S. publishing methods while living in the U.S., where he put in a stint with the Gallup Poll, married an American girl, and earned degrees at the University of Delaware and Washington...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Success Without Strings | 10/24/1955 | See Source »

Plenty of Scope. What makes Stardust so durable? The lyrics for one thing: they contain just the right proportions of imagination, sentimentality and corn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: They're Playing Our Song | 10/24/1955 | See Source »

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