Word: concernedly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...also something of a milestone in the current white-black confrontation. It is suffused not only with hot anger at indignity and injustice but with a glowing concern for men and women as men and women. "There are no squares, sweetheart," one of the players says. "Everybody is his own hipster...
...said Executive Council Member O. B. Hardison of the University of North Carolina, English department, "it may spell the death of this organization. This is an attempt by 300 people to control 28,000." On the contrary, says Kampf: "The association should stimulate its members to personal and active concern with educational and social issues...
Still, the stock market's major concern is how fast the Federal Reserve will tighten up the money supply in its campaign to squelch the pressures and psychology of inflation. Rising taxes will make the battle easier and will siphon funds away from investors. On Jan. 1, Social Security taxes went up by $3.6 billion a year. By April 15, taxpayers must give Washington an extra $11 billion in catch-up payments for the second quarter of 1968, when the 10% income-tax surcharge was not withheld from salaries. With a shrinking federal deficit also sucking steam from...
...such sticky complications exist, rather than going through the creative effort of portraying them dramatically. Yet Eliot, as always, emerges as the one character of considerable authenticity. Most likely this is because he contains so many of Snow's own convictions and so much of Snow's concern for the future of the race. Montaigne once said, "I am myself the subject of my works," and for an essayist that was enough. It is not enough for a novelist. In The Sleep of Reason, Eliot seems motivated largely by Snow's need to have...
...correct your article about the Divinity School and "the Paine Hall sit-in"? As Dean of Students I expect to report to the Divinity School faculty at our meeting on January 17 concerning my interviews with the three Divinity School students involved. Such reports are not in the form of "recommendations by the Administration," but rather reviews of the facts as a basis for Faculty deliberation and decision-making. Hence the CRIMSON statement that "the Administration of the Divinity School will recommend to the Faculty" is inaccurate, and that inaccuracy is greatly exaggerated by the headline, "Divinity School Requests . . ." Despite...