Word: contentedly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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What was the point of it all? Buckley explained that he had meant to show that "forged documents would be widely accepted as genuine, provided their content was inherently plausible." Indeed, some of them contained excerpts from the real Pentagon papers as published in the Times The phony memos jibed with Buckley's basic beliefs on Viet Nam: that the U.S. would have had to hit harder and faster to win, and that the nation would not stand a long war. He admitted that he had "proceeded in something of an ethical vacuum," adding, "The New York
...hold the very young. But he has greater ambitions than that. His programs are heavily laced with contemporary works like Penderecki's Pittsburgh Overture, Badings' Armageddon and Mayuzumi's Concerto for Percussion-just three of the 200 scores he has commissioned and published. Not content merely to bring music to the local wharf or ferry landing, he sends chamber groups into homes for lecture recitals, and he himself can often be found rehearsing the local high school band. It may just be that there is no greater innovative force in American music than Robert Boudreau...
...content, they are not so very different from the late Janis Joplin's, but worlds apart in style...
...which the Government must prove the need for a permanent injunction. Meanwhile in Manhattan, the Government failed to prove that need to Judge Gurfein's satisfaction. Denying the injunction against the Times, Gurfein reported that Friday's secret hearing had produced no evidence of damaging data. "Without revealing the content of the testimony," he wrote, "suffice it to say that no cogent reasons were advanced as to why these documents, except in the general framework of embarrassment, would vitally affect the security of the nation." But the Times was still blocked from publishing the report until the U.S. Court...
...proposal would also give the government authority to set standards for tar and nicotine content. As a result, say industry officials, the expected strict requirements could make Canadian cigarettes "tasteless" and encourage bootlegged imports from the U.S. For all their complaints, tobacco men are highly unlikely to violate the law. Anyone who does will face a maximum fine of $100,000 or five years in jail-or both...