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Word: surmountable (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Throughout the myriad crises, King continues to exude confidence. "I have no doubts-absolutely none-that we shall surmount our temporary problems," he says. King has been flying the financial circuit, trying to calm creditors and ease the cash crunch. Last week there were unconfirmed reports that some banks would tide King over with fresh financing. Clearly, King is determined not to reign over the liquidation of an empire. The next few weeks will show whether his determination, persuasiveness and agility will be enough to cure the short-term ailments and give King Resources time to achieve what it desperately...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A Kingdom Besieged | 8/3/1970 | See Source »

...suggests Esau and Jacob. To this are added a dash of psychedelics and some excellent literary effects. In the early pages, the prose has a deadly metallic precision. When Home goes to Russia, Blum changes his style to a controlled lyricism that quietly points toward a meaning: man can surmount such obscenities as technological soul snatching by confronting his beginnings and forging a new mythology. In Home's case the transcendence occurs during a return to what is literally his motherland. ∙R.Z. Sheppard

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Heels and Souls | 7/27/1970 | See Source »

...hard to write the life story of a hero. It is even harder if you yourself are the hero. South Africa's renowned heart surgeon Dr. Christiaan Barnard did not entirely surmount this dilemma. In fact, it seems at times as if he or his collaborator, a onetime Newsweek correspondent in Rome, found it hard to choke self-admiration down into a deprecatory gruffness. The poor boy who made good, the youth who kept his head when all men doubted him, the Walter Mitty syndrome-all the treacherous cliches of autobiography are there. What emerges from them, however...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Cliches Come True | 7/20/1970 | See Source »

...failure of the play is not totally the actor's fault. If Ah, Wilderness is to succeed it must do so because of a director who recognizes the play's defeets and works assiduously to surmount them. Thomas Grucnewald has not only overlooked the play's weaknesses, he has made them shine like a rotten mackerel. The whole produciton becomes a litany of praise for conventional values against the challenge of art and change as envisioned by a failed poet through three manhattans at a Grosse Point cocktail party. The conception of a production is the director's task...

Author: By David Keyser, | Title: At the Loeb Ah, Wilderness | 7/10/1970 | See Source »

Backyard Problems. Despite successes, Audrey Cohen's graduates were at first blocked by the very degree barrier that she set out to surmount. Often they advanced a rung or two in their new jobs and then stalled. The reason, along with professional jealousy, was that C.H.S. had no power to grant formal degrees. So two years ago Mrs. Cohen petitioned the New York State Board of Regents for a charter permitting her school to issue the same Associate in Arts degree available at the state's community colleges. "Everybody is so busy trying to mimic Harvard," she contended...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Self-Made College | 7/6/1970 | See Source »

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