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Word: weightier (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Weightier Problems. Though no one expects that these new measures will cure all of the airlines' ills, agreement on the smaller points opens the way for the lines to seek solutions to the weightier problems also discussed by Boyd and the presidents. Both sides recognized that the single most pressing problem is overcompetition. Boyd favors mergers to eliminate wasteful competition. Says he: "There is no magic number of U.S. airlines to ensure competition." Some airline presidents prefer an orderly cutting back of over-competition on key routes, which are sometimes flown by as many as eight airlines-with most...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aviation: Charting a New Course | 10/13/1961 | See Source »

...Luciana Paluzzi, since she sent him a terse cable informing him that she had a baby boy in Rome" (Louella Parsons), that "when enameled bathtubs and lavatories become yellow, rub with a solution of salt and turpentine to restore the whiteness" (Bert Bacharach), and, in a quick switch to weightier matters, that the Dominican Republic under Trujillo "was the best country on earth from the standpoint of the practical well-being of the people" (Westbrook Pegler). The Telly turned its attention (for 21 column inches) to a man in Greenwich Village who had just acquired a 1936 Dodge, reported that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Too Many Is Not Enough | 7/14/1961 | See Source »

...Sunday field that seemed all ends and no middle-one that ranged from the cerebral approach of the Sunday Times to the News of the World, with an appeal that is blatantly visceral. At sight of the upstart Telegraph, a paper advertised as being neither "weightier than you wanted" nor "more frivolous than you fancied,'' the frivolous Sunday sheets smiled indulgently. The Sunday Times could not resist predicting that the newcomer might prove useful as a primer for fledgling intellectuals "not yet quite up to the high cultural and political standards which the Sunday Times characteristically maintains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: News on Sunday | 6/30/1961 | See Source »

Downrange, to the north of Grand Bahama Island, was an even weightier deployment. Circling near the calculated impact area of the Mercury capsule, Lake Champlain bristled with helicopters, and a flotilla of six destroyers strung out along the range. Watching the range with sharp electronic eyes were the swarming radars of Cape Canaveral, and high overhead soared monstrous aircraft burdened with more radars. Neither money, men nor equipment had been spared to protect the life of U.S. Astronaut...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Freedom's Flight | 5/12/1961 | See Source »

...With no weightier weapon than the press communiqué, Laos' rattled politicians managed to convince the world last week that the brink of war was near. "Foreign forces of North Viet Nam have attacked." cried the Laotians. "An estimated strength of six battalions." Next day Information Minister Bouavan Norasingh announced dramatically that the northern provincial capital of Phongsaly had just fallen, though "our troops fought to the last bullet." Who had captured Phongsaly? Bouavan stared at the ceiling for a moment and answered: "The Viet Minh and the Chinese Communists." With no way of knowing what was actually going...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Laos: Partially False Alarm | 1/13/1961 | See Source »

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