Word: clashed
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NEWS for us is many things, from an armed clash in the Himalayas to the quiet stirrings of a scientist's-or an artist's-mind. But one kind of TIME story is a particular favorite in our own office, and it may not be bragging too much to suggest that TIME invented the form. This is the preelection look of an American city, congressional district or state, in which in a brief space we look at two contenders deep in political combat, consider their personalities, quote their remarks, judge their style and assess their chances-all against...
...Administration line; Lodge attempts to draw distinctions and offer constructive alternatives. So far he has been unable to find a vital, vote-winning area of disagreement. On medical care for the aged Lodge opposes the compulsory social security approach, but he manages to skirt the basic liberal-conservative clash and to emerge supporting a bigger and better plan "of the individual's choice" with extended coverage to "three million needs people not under social security" and with extended benefits of nursing care. Lodge calls himself "an extremist" on civil rights and demands the promised executive order on federal housing...
...conferences, rarely mentions Di Salle. refuses to face him in debate. Di Salle, on the other hand, has stumped every one of the state's 88 counties, visited some 130 towns he had never seen before, and is eager to draw Rhodes into any sort of head-on clash. Playing the role of challenger rather than incumbent, he has listed 32 questions that he wants Rhodes to answer. Example: "Will you support public-school education at existing state levels, lower levels, or higher levels?" Complains Di Salle: "Ordinarily it is the incumbent who opposes debates...
...worst mismatch since the Liston-Patterson fight." cried an exultant Republican. Many California Democrats sadly assented. Lured reluctantly into a statewide TV debate with Republican Richard Nixon. California's Democratic Governor Pat Brown discovered last week that in a head-on clash...
Whether much or little comes out of the council depends to a large extent upon the numerical strength-and the endurance-of the two opposing forces that will clash at the council. Says Archbishop Denis Hurley of Durban, South Africa: "There will be much disputing in the nave of St. Peter's over how the church must enter the Atomic Age." A number of conservative bishops believe that the church should stand aloof from the pressures of a temporal world, holding fast to its traditions. Led by such impressive figures as Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani of the Holy Office, Ernesto...