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William Espinosa does his best to consign the President's plan to the ash heap with Buckley-esque logic and equally obtuse prose. His argument that Johnson's plan represents a thinly veiled desire to extend the control of the President over Congress may be valid. But paranoid statements like "the Executive searches with lupine voracity for problem areas that it may entrench itself in yet another sphere of life" are absurd...

Author: By John A. Herfort, | Title: The Dunster Political Review | 5/10/1966 | See Source »

...hesitates to consign A Man's A Man to the second category, but it is a relentlessly episodic history of immutably two-dimensional characters. Its message--that the army hampers self-expression--is obvious and overly familiar. Structurally limp, the play begins arbitrarily, and ends at least three times...

Author: By Martin S. Levine and George H. Rosen, S | Title: A Man's A Man | 4/29/1966 | See Source »

...always been a country in love with the future. Americans have never quite shared the traditional notion that prying into tomorrow is suspect if not downright dangerous-the sort of feeling that made Dante consign soothsayers to the fourth chasm of the Inferno. On the contrary, the U.S. readily accepted the fact that modern science established progress as a faith and the future as an earthly Eden. Yet recently, the American passion for the future has taken a new turn. Leaving Utopians and science-fiction writers far behind, a growing number of professionals have made prophecy a serious and highly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: THE FUTURISTS: Looking Toward A.D. 2000 | 2/25/1966 | See Source »

Harvard goes into The Game with a 4-2-2 record; a win today would give the Crimson a respectable third-place finish in the League, but a loss would consign Harvard to fifth place, something that hasn't happened since...

Author: By R. ANDREW Beyer, | Title: Close Defensive Battle Expected In 82nd Harvard-Yale Game Today | 11/20/1965 | See Source »

...President, the vote came none too soon. Groaning under the weight of 44 million manuscripts, books, prints and other material, and faced with an annual increase of a million items, the library has had to stack its hoard in the offices and passages of its two existing buildings and consign the overflow to such makeshift extensions as a former aircraft paint hangar in Middle River, Md., 50 miles from the capital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Capital: Monumental Amends | 10/8/1965 | See Source »

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