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Usage:

...backpedaling," he remarked carefully, a pointed reference to President Eisenhower's recent decision to allow a 50% rise in tariffs on imported bicycles. "Now should be the time surely to abandon the metaphor and speed of the velocipede and hope for a more up-to-date propulsion toward wider trade opportunities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: No Devaluation Now | 9/26/1955 | See Source »

Included in the plaudits was a message from President Pusey, read by his assistant, William Bentinck-Smith '27, expressing confidence in the new Dean's ability to lead the Divinity school to new and wider Christian service...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Protestant Leaders Honor New Divinity School Dean | 9/26/1955 | See Source »

...Lincolns are longer, lower and wider than the 1955 models, bear a family resemblance to this year's Mercury Montclair. The engine is the most powerful Lincoln has ever built, and one of the most powerful ever put in a U.S. family car (285 h.p. v. 225 in the 1955 Lincoln, 270 in the Cadillac Eldorado. 275 in the Packard Caribbean, and 300 in Chrysler's limited production "300"). Both Premiere and Capri have automatic transmission and power steering as standard equipment; the Premiere adds power window controls and a device that moves the driver's seat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AUTOS: Chasing the Aristocrat | 9/5/1955 | See Source »

...austere Times, which errs in the other direction by making all news sound like History, was not being excessively stuffy. The abysmal depths are opening even wider. Last week the tabloid Daily Sketch's, circulation topped the 1,000,000 mark, a sensational rise of nearly 400,000 readers in little more than two years, based wholly on the paper's new diet of cheesecake, sex, crime and alarm-ringing political coverage. Last week Fleet Streeters also got the announcement of a new daily, the Sun. Said the Sun's prospectus, leaving no doubt as to what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Britain's Abysmal Depths | 8/22/1955 | See Source »

...century Europe's most renowned and most recalcitrant critic, who for 40 years mercilessly shredded Wagnerian operas, won painful immortality when Wagner wrote him into Meistersinger as the waspish Beckmesser. But perhaps the most remarkable music critic of all time, a man who later made his mark in wider literary fields, was George Bernard Shaw. A new selection from his weekly criticisms for London's The Star and The World (Shaw on Music; Doubleday Anchor Books; 95?) proves that Critic Shaw did not have to be wrong to be memorable. Half a century later, his musical opinions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: The Dangerous Delinquents | 8/15/1955 | See Source »

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