Word: broken
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...need not accept the consequences of their acts? Who tells them that they have the enormous skill and administrative ability needed to run a university? Who teaches them that integrity is an important virtue, then gives them a philosophy that will cost them either their integrity or a bloody, broken bead? And then when all hell breaks loose, who rushes around wearing white armbands, trying to arrange a compromise for the monsters they themselves have created? It is no coincidence that those who initiated the force and violence were mainly students of philosophy, the humanities and social sciences...
...rights issues. It organized Northern ghetto dwellers in such projects as Chicago's Jobs Or Income-Now (JOIN) and fought to get Mississippi's "Freedom delegation" seated at the 1964 Democratic Convention. The Viet Nam war, however, led to a change of tactics. By 1966, S.D.S. had broken with the L.I.D. and decided against working within the existing political framework. Since then, the group has been trying to be what National Secretary Michael Spiegel, 21, a onetime Harvard student, calls "an independent radical force...
Garble. The Phoenician text has a pedigree almost as strange as the tale it tells. In 1872, a slave belonging to a landowner named Joaquim Alves de Costa supposedly found the inscription on a broken stone tablet on his sprawling estate in the tropical rain forests of Brazil's Paraíba state. Costa's son, a draftsman, made a copy of the baffling markings and sent it to the Brazilian
...Chinese. Obviously, unless the news picks up, most of the visitors will soon depart-as have Huntley and Cronkite-to return when and if developments warrant. But already the Paris talks have broken all records for press coverage of peace negotiations. Fewer than 100 correspondents, for example, were in Reims to witness the surrender of Nazi Germany in World War II, and only 120 went to Kaesong for the opening of the Korean truce negotiations in 1951. The only major news organization not represented at the Paris talks, in fact, was Peking's New China
Bigness is by no means new to Japanese industry. The merger trend began with the reconsolidation of some of the old zaibatsu - powerful family cartels that once controlled nearly all of Japanese business, and were broken up during the U.S. postwar occupation. Three parts of a famed zaibatsu, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, were rejoined in 1964 to form what is Japan's third largest corporation. But the current mergers are not so much part of the old cartel systems as symbols of Japan's new concern over strong foreign competition...