Word: concerned
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...decided to go ahead anyhow in undertaking a national survey to break out individual states and key cities," even though it might cost him, according to an earlier-and very conservative-estimate, an average of at least $5,000 a state. Such a figure was no longer of little concern to the Governor, whose family has reportedly set a ceiling on its own contribution to Rocky's bid. With the vigorous campaign beginning to press that limit, his new-found friends may be needed for more than moral support...
...P.H.S. did not limit its concern to lung cancer, but pointed to an "increasing convergence" of new evidence that smoking can contribute to the development of heart disease. It does this, according to latest research, by producing a gap between the heart's demand for oxygen and the blood's ability to supply...
...Colleges are not churches, clinics, or even parents. Whether or not a student burns a draft card, participates in a civil rights march, engages in premarital or extramarital sexual activity, becomes pregnant, attends church, sleeps all day or drinks all night, is not really the concern of an educational institution...
...speaker was neither Nanterre's Danny the Red nor Columbia's Mark Rudd, but the president of the uncontroversial American Association for Higher Education, Lewis B. Mayhew. University administrators who assume such concern, added Mayhew, are really to blame for much of the current student unrest. A professor of education at Stanford University, Mayhew told some 125 association members in Dallas last week that too many college officials ignore student rights, and that "behind every successful student outbreak stands some administrator who exercised discretion without legitimacy." Part of the problem, he said, lies in the attempt of college...
...play's comic potential are unfolded in the exciting and inventive reinterpreation of dialogue and characterization, reinterpretation remaining faithful to Shakespeare's intent in its bawdy humor, essential ambiguity, and emphasis on magic. Reviewing Orson Welles' film Falstaff, the Crimson's Peter Jaszi attributed to Welles "a single overriding concern: to make the text, both the words and the visual images implicit in them, wholly and completely his own, and thereby to make them ours." This can, with A Midsummer Night's Dream, be said of Mayer, and his success is very much our gain...