Word: contentively
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Soul Content. Last week he was even ready for his first major swing through the South. He managed to draw some friendly crowds while evoking no visible hostility. Yet his stop in a black neighborhood in Atlanta, like an earlier visit to Pittsburgh's Negro Hill district, displayed again his failure to stir black enthusiasm. Asked why black Democrats should support him instead of Humphrey, McCarthy replied: "I haven't really made much of an argument that they should, except that if we pursue the war, there's not enough money to take care of poverty programs in this country...
...service our lengthening list of advertisers, Jack Meyers will coordinate a staff of 160 sales-and-marketing experts who specialize in industries as well as areas and who offer space in 66 different editions of TIME. While basically the same in editorial content,* these editions (23 in the U.S. and 43 elsewhere in the world) have widely varied audiences-geographically, such as Europe, Asia and assorted metropolitan areas in the U.S., or demographically, as among doctors, college students and educators...
...similar vein might federal historians record that Lyndon Johnson headed back to his humble Texas dwelling in the happy knowledge that the world was at peace, his nation united and content...
...often, Shaw hoped to shake his readers up, and succeeded brilliantly. The Preface is witty, and it is blunt; moreover, it is utterly serious in content. And it has lost none of its punch in a half century. Anyone interested in religion can profit from trying to match his mind against Shaw's here...
...something of the deceptive nature of initial appearance; the show's greatness rests largely on his refusal to submit to seductive archetype. Those of you who know Bottom as a goodhearted if demented bumbler, Puck as a juvenile sprite, Theseus as a wise Shakespearian justice, or Hippolyta as a content and passive fiancee, are due for the nicest kind of surprise; for in troubling to treat A Midsummer Night's Dream to a "new adaptation," Mayer has restored to us a worthy (and terribly funny) text in which many of us, I would wager, long ago lost interest...