Search Details

Word: wide (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

Saturday, April 8 ABC's WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (ABC, 5-6:30 p.m.). Highlights from Sebring's twelve-hour Grand Prix of Endurance for sportscars, plus the A.A.U. Men's Indoor Swimming Championships in Dallas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Listings: Apr. 7, 1967 | 4/7/1967 | See Source »

Perhaps the greatest problem that the Psychiatric Service will face in coming years is the ability to communicate with the wide variety of students who go to Harvard. The most common complaint among students who have rejected the counseling they found at UHS is that it is narrow minded. Although not all of them use exactly this phrase, most of the dissatisfied feel that the Establishment doesn't understand them and thus is incapable of helping them...

Author: By Stephen D. Lerney, | Title: Should You See Your Local Shrink? | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (ABC, 5-6:30 p.m.). The Vail International Giant Slalom from Vail, Colo., and the N.C.A.A. Wrestling Championship from Kent, Ohio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Mar. 31, 1967 | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

Still in the 1800s. At earlier meetings, Johnson's flying squad heard Maryland officials complain about book-thick federal regulations, going into such "ridiculous" detail as one by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare demanding that nursing homes have doors exactly 4 ft. 2 in. wide. In Kansas, Superintendent of Motor Vehicles L. A. Billings railed against a flood of complicated directives on highway safety: "We have your 13 directives-any one of which would take five years to implement. And you want us to tell you how we'll meet them in one month...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Administration: Stretching the Limbs | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...Wolf Von Eckardt, 49, a wide-ranging critic for the Washington Post, is a self-appointed protector of Washington monuments past and to come-but he is engagingly unpredictable. He urged the Kennedy cultural center to copy the best features of New York's Lincoln Center. "The camp thing to do is to call Lincoln Center middlebrow or mediocre," he writes, "but I happen to thrill to noble proportions, a festive progression of spaces, and most of all perhaps to the kind of architecture which, like good writing, is so compelling that you don't even notice that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: Civic Consciences | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

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