Word: alters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...enactment of the Freedom Budget would not only dramatically affect the lives of thousands of disadvantaged Americans. It would radically alter the relationship of government to the economy, and establish a commitment to democratic planning. It is therefore regrettable that the Crimson reporter dismissed the Freedom Budget as "warmed-over New Deal economics" as an attempt "to turn back the clock three years and make good all things previously made bad." The reporter is weary of economic priorities, and rejects them as no longer relevant. Tom Kahn, who will lead a Freedom Budget Conference workshop this Saturday on Jobs...
...even when questions of misquotation do not arise, matters of context and meaning to do. Since my views on the fall-out from the Dow demonstration took up many inches of your space on Saturday, and somewhat misleadingly at that, I hope you will allow me to correct or alter some impressions...
Sunday, November 12 LOOK UP AND LIVE (CBS, 10:30-11 a.m.). How should we use atomic energy? Should we create, prolong or alter life? How do we educate for a technological society? In the search for answers to such difficult questions, man is faced with "Choice, the Imperative of Tomorrow." Part 2 of a series...
...visit may have helped "to relax" relations, Sihanouk later said, but it did nothing to alter the Prince's conviction that "sooner or later, all Asia will be Chinese." In nearly three hours of bafflegab at a press conference, he unequivocally supported Hanoi's terms for ending the war in Viet Nam. As soon as America stopped sending planes over the Cambodian border and recognized his country's "territorial integrity," allowed the Prince, he would be delighted to resume diplomatic relations with Washington...
...crimes, but the legacy of Stalinism has made an enduring impression on the everyday lives of most Russians. In the fourth volume of his memoirs, entitled Post-War Years: 1945-54, Novelist Ilya Ehrenburg wrote that "it is far easier to change policy and the economic system than to alter human consciousness." Russians, said Ehrenburg, who died in September, "have been unable to divest themselves of a sense of constriction, of fear, of casuistry, of survivals from the past." Today, most Russians long only for a quiet life, a little more freedom, a few more privileges, a bit more self...