Word: contentively
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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THAT figure doesn't count another 705,000 copies of our five international editions. Those copies, in English and predominantly air-sped, are identical in editorial content to the U.S. edition, though differing in advertising. In Latin America we add four pages of regional news, and in Canada four pages of Canadian news...
...been argued that the variety of educational backgrounds which an entering class brings to Harvard forces the college to offer General Education courses that differ in prerequisites as well as content. This is all the more reason for preserving a common element in science instruction. The strongly science-minded student will move directly into course work with a Department; the humanist may not look for a course to waken his scientific interest. Consequently science in the program is most important to freshmen who arrive uncommitted, and particularly for those who come from schools where science was neglected. Their General Education...
...basic aims have not changed much since 1943, but they seem all the more vital today in a post-war America that seems content with Herman Wouk or Anne Morrow Lindbergh as culture, or will sit by quietly as it is told that nuclear radiation is a) dangerous, b) harmless, c) over its head, or d) none of its business...
...content with bis monopoly of New York's Spanish press, Chalk is also airlifting editions to Puerto Rico, thinks he can sell 100,000 copies a day on the island. In San Juan a newsman observed to Chalk that at the moment all of Puerto Rico's newspapers combined sell only that many. "Well," said Chalk, ''maybe that's a little exaggeration.'' Pocketa-pocketa...
...bothered with. There was a piece composed for the contest by a young composer named Pirumov that was pretty tricky, and I may keep it in my fingers for a while. But there were also pieces like the Tchaikovsky Sonata (in G Major) that are awfully long for their content...