Word: answering
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Practical Answer. One man who accepts neither alternative is the Rev. John Schocklee, a priest in a low-income area in St. Louis. His solution: bussing slumdwellers out of the central city so that they can shop in a farmers' market. A more practical answer is the cooperative. Manhattan's Morningside Heights Consumer Cooperative, a clean, friendly store on the fringes of Harlem, not only offers prices as low or lower than commercial outlets but also gives a 4.3% rebate on each customer's annual purchases. So successful has Morningside been that another coop, in the very...
Ever since University of Iowa Physicist James Van Allen discovered the earth-circling belts of radiation that bear his name, scientists have been trying to answer a simple but perplexing question: How do the electrons and protons that are trapped in the outer belt get there in the first place? Now, summarizing data he and other scientists have obtained from a host of recent satellites, Van Allen himself has reported a possible answer. At a meeting of the American Physical Society in Manhattan, he suggested that the charged particles are drawn into the belt by a high voltage generated across...
...results from all the universities will be tabulated in Cambridge by a computer that visually scans the answer sheets...
...answer fills 737 densely-packed pages. Coleman started by documenting the achievement gap between minority and majority children (Negroes, though of prime interest, were only one of several minority groups studied). To no one's surprise, he found minority children enter school at a lower achievement level than their majority counterparts, and fall further behind as their schooling progress. Coleman also discovered, again shocking few, that segregation is still the rule in U.S. schools. Sixtyfive per cent of all Negroes, and 80 per cent of all whites, attend schools filled 90 per cent by their own race...
...letter was written in answer to a letter signed by Haney. Schlesinger said yesterday he did not know that the letter was a form letter. The historian and special assistant to President Kennedy apologized for any personal allusions in his reply to Haney. But he continued that "the fact that the letters were not the effusions of an over-zealous senior tutor, but rather carefully considered demarches from University Hall makes their pomposity and inhumanity of tone all the more disturbing...