Word: adds
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...President's remarks did nothing to improve the New York settlement, and they further obscured the basic questions which are beginning to be asked on all sides about the guidelines system. In fact, the sole result of his statement was to add yet another irritant to a situation already quite irritating enough...
...some very workable alternatives open to her. On the one hand, she could increase the room and board fees for both on and off-campus residents. She has mentioned this possibility, and has claimed that the only alternative to changing the room-and-board structure would be to add $130 to the room rate and $35 to the board rate, making the total cost of room and board $990 in the off-campus houses and $1335 in the dorms. She said she was "very worried" about such a sharp increase in fees. But one wonders about this logic when, reluctant...
...example, we are distributing a bibliography on Negro Americans; coming soon are background studies-"TIME Guides"-to the U.S. Cabinet, space and Africa. Along with TIME itself, the Current Affairs Test, a Vacation Review Quiz, a Year-End Review in May, plus occasional maps and wall charts, they add up to a comprehensive and stimulating program designed to bring today's world into the classrooms...
Hanoi has spelled out its aims in four points, and they add up to outright withdrawal of U.S. troops and the seizure of South Viet Nam by the Viet Cong. Washington counters with its own 14 points, which actually go a considerable way toward creating areas for negotiation-but which are easily misunderstood, unless the fine print and the implicit qualifications are kept in mind. The rockbottom, irreducible U.S. aim is that South Viet Nam must be independent. Under every conceivable point of negotiation-provided both sides mean what they say-this U.S. minimum goal conflicts head-on with...
Newspapers were once content to dig up their own local news and run some wire-service copy on news of the rest of the world. Then they gradually began to import other material: columns, features, crossword puzzles, even editorials from various syndicates. Today they can add luster to their pages with "supplemental" news sent over leased wires by a handful of big metropolitan dailies. By paying anywhere from $50 to $850 a week, depending on their size and location, the papers, in effect, rent a Washington bureau and a string of foreign correspondents that they could not possibly afford...