Word: accept
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...also the function of such an institution in simply helping to preserve this body of perishing work. That so little effort has been given to this is only another instance of American culture's mad ingratitude or indifference toward its own best products. American universities are coming to accept their new responsibility as patrons of the arts, and I think it arguable that the forming of a major film library is a natural extension of this responsibility. Because I have some sense of how expensive and difficult an undertaking that would be, I was glad to learn of the CRIMSON...
...Unwillingness to Accept." A recent survey under the auspices of the Office of Economic Opportunity reported that the annual purchasing power of the average Watts family has actually declined 8% or $400 since 1959, during a period in which the typical U.S. family's income rose 14% and that of nonwhite families elsewhere jumped 24%. Thus Watts has changed little-but its illness goes deeper than poverty. Such, at least, was the view of former CIA Director John A. McCone, who headed a commission that conducted an exhaustive investigation of the August riots. Said McCone: "This is one more...
...baloney and burble ballyhoo about such Merrick productions as Look Back in Anger, La Plume de Ma Tante, Gypsy and Luther. To publicize his shows, Merrick with truly hippopotamic cheek has sent sandwich-board men into the streets of Manhattan encased in portable placarded pissoirs; persuaded President Johnson to accept the title tune of Hello, Dolly! (a Merrick show) as his campaign song; and conducted a hilarious war of words with the theater crit ics that recently came to a headline-grabbing climax when he canceled an entire preview performance and bought back or exchanged about 1,100 tickets -just...
...MIRCEA ELIADE, 59, Rumanian Orthodox, professor of the history of religions and the world's leading authority on ancient mythology (TIME, Feb. 11). "I teach," says Rumanian-born Eliade, "without any theological implications, and they accept it here." >NATHAN SCOTT, 40, Episcopalian, professor of theology and literature. A Detroit Negro educated at Manhattan's Union Theological Seminary, Scott did a stint of teaching at Howard before going to Chicago in 1955. His books include studies on Camus and Beckett...
...other ways softened "the stiffness of present legislation" on mixed marriages. Paul issued his 1,500-word decree on The Sacrament of Matrimony just four days before the scheduled arrival in Rome of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who had planned to discuss the Catholic Church's refusal to accept the validity of mixed marriages performed outside the church and its insistence that children of such unions be raised as Catholics...