Word: approach
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...concedes that the end of the fighting "will not quickly ease the Government's budgetary bind." Despite Saigon's decision to attend the Paris peace talks (see following story) and the hope for more serious talks, negotiations could still be dragging on as the 1970 midterm elections approach...
...EAST. Whether Nixon becomes the President who normalizes relations with China depends less on his own ingenuity than on Peking's ability to replace its Maoist aberrations with a more pragmatic approach. Another critical problem in the area, and one that is often overlooked, is Japan. The Hudson Institute's Herman Kahn places the restructuring of Washington-Tokyo relations among the top five priorities of the new Administration in the foreign field; former U.S. Ambassador to Tokyo Edwin Reischauer, not surprisingly, places it even higher. Reischauer also notes that in the rest of Asia a precipitate U.S. pullout...
...traditional radical approach to this situation is the Marxist one of plumping for the aim of mobilizing these workers to overwhelm the power of the Rich by sheer weight of numbers. This was to be done by explaining to the workers that their interests were not being looked after in the prevailing state of affairs, which realization supposedly would so enrage the working class that they would do something about redressing the situation...
Registering coeds were met at the front desk on Monday by A Group Of The Guys From The House who in posture and approach were very much like A Group Of The Guys From Nini's. They looked me over, shoved my temporary student I.D. card toward me (Jody Adams is a Yale Undergraduate from November 4 to November 6) and sent me, with a guide, to find my room and its owner, my "student host...
...leaves a trail of squashed jokes behind it (as the more-tasteless-than-ever Audio Lab ad on the back cover graphically shows, there are times when an appeal to animal emotions gets nauseating). But there does seem to be an inherent confusion of purpose in the Lampoon's approach to its role as "humor magazine." In most of this month's pieces, clever Poonies work from the assumption that if they imitate any kind of over-used literary genre, the result will be funny. Often...