Word: think
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Frankly, I don't anticipate too much trouble with Penn," Ulen said last night. I'm more concerned with the Army meet, which I think will be our first big test of the season. They beat us last year but I think we have a good chance to reverse the outcome next week...
...outward-bound Lemming, this writer daily reads over amusement sections in search of new and different Western movies, and then goes to see them. His friends, an intellectual lot, laugh at this and claim that "if you've seen one Western you've seen them all." I think I can prove them wrong...
Arriving on your globe for the first time since 1900, I was struck by a change of mood. Humanity in general had come to think of itself in a way different from the confident eagerness of a half-century ago. Then everyone was all optimism, inevitable progress still enjoyed some degree of credibility, and the millennium had almost arrived. Man, while not still center of the universe, yet had faith in reason and his own power finally to wrest control of nature from those forces which had remained mysterious till then...
...looked like a simple business deal. Pan American World Airways wanted to pay $17.5 million cash for the assets of American Overseas Airlines and fly A.O.A.'s transatlantic routes. A.O.A.'s parent company, American Airlines, wanted to sell because it did not think transatlantic flying would continue to be profitable. Then things got complicated...
When P.I.E.'s routes are spliced to Keeshin's, P.I.E. will have a 24,000-mile coast-to-coast truck network, winding through 23 states and the District of Columbia. By running Keeshin's routes with P.I.E. efficiency, Humphries & Johnson think they can truck freight from coast to coast in 9off sleep with coffee. A P.I.E. run from Oakland to Chicago uses a relay team of ten men, one for each section of the route which twists up the gear-grinding slopes of the Rockies and through the Midwest plains to the East...