Word: apt
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...other pro players complain that helmets are hot and cumbersome. What's more, says ex-Chicago Coach Johnny Gottselig: "A guy wearing a helmet invites attention. Players are apt to give him a few extra raps on the skull, figuring they won't hurt...
...mixture of old and new at the conference was an apt symbol of the state of Orthodoxy, the largest of Judaism's three branches. About a quarter of the 5,600,000 Jews in the U.S. are Orthodox. Elsewhere, a Jew who is at all religiously observant will, more often than not, be Orthodox; of Israel's 6,000 synagogues, only nine are nonOrthodox. Far more than Reform or Conservative Judaism, Orthodoxy lives by the letter of God's law. It accepts every word of the Hebrew Bible as divinely inspired and insists that the God-fearing...
...This country," declares Chile's President Eduardo Frei in an apt simile, "is like the worker who was perfectly happy earning only $50 a month. Then his salary doubles, he moves to a better neighborhood, buys new furniture, better clothes, a TV set. Instead of appreciating what he has gained, he begins grumbling and complaining about what he does not have." Last week Frei had as many grounds for grumbling as any of his striving fellow Chileans. His trouble is that he may wake up one day soon and discover that he does not even have a political party...
...first to return to Harvard from Vietnam, Sloan is still wrestling with his conscience and revising his views. Many more Viet Vets are apt to be returning in the next few years and will have to face the same painful re-entry problems. Each will have a vested interest in reaffirming the rightness of what he has been fighting for. Maybe a few of them, like Sloan, will make their adjustment by re-examining their views and lending their prestige to ending...
...moderate Republican, alongside such liberals as Economist John Kenneth Galbraith and Civil Rights Leader Martin Luther King, both of whom advocate some sort of guaranteed annual income. In fact, what ideological difference there is on the guaranteed-income issue is largely a matter of emphasis, with conservative supporters apt to put more accent on incentives-and to link their proposals to reductions in what Economist Friedman decries as a "rag bag" of Democrat-administered welfare programs...