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Word: tuned (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...world's biggest jukebox maker. Three years ago Seeburg gave mankind the 200-selection machine. This year the sound in Seeburg's gaudy new juke is stereophonic. To the jukebox industry, the new sound is only a little newer than the two young men who call the tune for Seeburg: President Delbert W. Coleman and Board Chairman Herbert J. Siegel. The corporation (fiscal 1958 sales: about $25 million) makes not only jukeboxes but most of Western Union's facsimile equipment, plus key electronic components for the Nike and Sidewinder missiles. Two years ago, at the ripe ages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: Money in the Box | 10/27/1958 | See Source »

...time when the glass broke in 1914 and the killing four-year frost came in. Her personal story is romantic enough to make Ouida-lady laureate of the plush paradise-blush for modesty. It is offset by the tough self-knowledge of an aristocracy that called a pretty fast tune but was prepared to pay a stiff price for the piper. One-fourth of the book is occupied by the war diaries and letters of Alfred Duff Cooper, an infantry officer in France. After censoring a letter home from a soldier, he recorded that the man had written...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Heartbreak House | 10/27/1958 | See Source »

...harriers' second meet on their new course at Franklin Park, the U. of Mass. Redmen should prove little more than a mid-week tune-up for a tougher Ivy League contest with Dartmouth this Friday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Undefeated Cross Country Team Favored Over U. of Mass. Today | 10/21/1958 | See Source »

...tumult and the shouting and the innumerable suits and countersuits in the law courts waned, so did Marie Stopes's sense of scientific precision. She got a few weird ideas about how the marriage bed should be placed (always in a north-south direction, "in tune with magnetic currents"). Last winter she became ill, attributed it vaguely to "radioactivity in the atmosphere." Last week, widowed since 1949, she died in Surrey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Early Crusader | 10/13/1958 | See Source »

...public is this public medicine that even healthy Alaskans from Barrow to Kenai tune in their radios to little else. For titillation, they say, professional entertainment hardly compares. One schoolteacher-nurse's wife, forced to listen during dinner, queasily agrees: "If you've never listened to symptoms while eating chocolate pie, you haven't lived...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Doctor Calling. Over. | 10/6/1958 | See Source »

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