Word: steps
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...will reach about 400,000 by the end of 1966-at which point it will equal for the first time the U.S. troop strength in Korea-and then go up to half a million by next spring. The problem is that the enemy's buildup continues to match, step for step, that of the U.S. In the past year, the allies have not been able to increase their troop-strength advantage of 4 to 1, despite the influx of Americans. Although the Communists in the first seven months of 1966 have had 25,250 men killed-more than three...
Reston has taken the crucial step in identifying the disease--lack of perspective in the press. He has outlined suggestions for future experiments in reporting the news. Now it is up to the papers...
...basic knowledge to him." Doman claims that a baby will take to the written word as easily as to the spoken language and can even learn to read before he learns to speak-if the written word is presented repeatedly and in large letters. His book details step-by-step teaching sessions, beginning at two years with several daily periods of less than five minutes each. Example: the parent touches the baby's toes, pronounces the word "toes," holds up a large sign with the word on it. Each session must be a "game" that both participants find "joyous...
...Step up and take a look at the U.S.'s latest secret weapon. A hot missile? No, a cool cat-Earl ("Fatha") Hines, jazz pianist nonpareil. Fatha and his sextet were midway through a six-week cultural swing through Russia last week when the Soviets decided that he was just too culturally dangerous. Perhaps it was because Hines & Co. had been wowing S.R.O. audiences everywhere. In Kiev, 10,000 youngsters had packed the Sports Palace, and Hines stirred up a swirling, rhythmic turbulence that had the Russians snapping their fingers like Hollywood hippies...
...clock one morning last week, Common Market Commission President Walter Hallstein, unshaven and wearily ebullient, emerged from a meeting in Brussels to announce "the most important step in the history of the building of the community." With only a few loose ends left lying around, the Common Market had finally finished the work of creating a unified farm economy for its six member nations...