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Word: confronting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...chief conflict in the play remains that between Conscience and Compromise. Although Antigone and Creon both appear in the earlier part of the work, they confront each other face to face only in the second half--and this tug-of-war is the heart of the play. In this production, the two principals are a worthy match for each other: Maria Tucci and Morris Carnovsky. Carnovsky is of course a known quantity. But I had never been especially struck by Miss Tucci's endeavors. Her Antigone, however, is miles above anything she has done before; it is in fact...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: AMERICAN SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL: III | 7/14/1967 | See Source »

...words of one of his singers. Appropriately, six of the seven productions presented by the Hamburgers at the Met were written in the 20th century (as was a quarter of their entire repertory). "The moral and democratic responsibility of a music-theater manager," says Liebermann, "is to confront the public with its own times," not to preside over "an old, stinky museum...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Opera: How to Hear Ahead | 7/7/1967 | See Source »

...often, there is a tendency to view the low-income neighborhood as expendable... One chief thrust of the Cambridge proposal is to confront that issue directly, and to test many techniques for preserving a low-income area for its residents and for injecting new and valuable resources into its way of life...

Author: By Robert J. Samuelson, | Title: CAMBRIDGE: The Spectre of Total Change | 7/3/1967 | See Source »

...disruptive demonstration against Secretary of Defense McNamara when he visited Harvard in November. The impulse behind those students who mobbed the Secretary and physically halted his car was one of frustration and pique--frustration at the apparent reluctance of the Administration's high officials at that time to confront the more articulate spokesmen of the strident anti- war movement, and pique at the decision of McNamara's host, the Institute of Politics, to shield him from large numbers of students...

Author: By John A. Herfort, | Title: War Protest at Harvard Shifts To Radical-Moderate Coalition | 7/3/1967 | See Source »

Nonetheless, the parley succeeded in dispelling the phantasmagoria that had issued from the U.N. and beclouded world affairs all week. The meeting substituted reality for rhetoric. And it gave two men, astonishingly alike in their experience of power and their awareness of its limitations, an unexampled opportunity to confront and assess one another. Neither Lyndon Johnson nor Aleksei Kosygin has ever won high acclaim as a diplomatist, but their first encounters proved that both men are as equally equipped for such a conference as any two statesmen the two nations have yet fielded simultaneously...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: Summit in Smalltown | 6/30/1967 | See Source »

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