Word: correct
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...attractive, workable alternatives to Administration proposals," Ford insists. "Our aim should be an affirmative and specific Republican legislative program for the 89th Congress, produced as early as possible in the session. We must stake out our positions independently of any preplanning with the Southern Democratic leadership so as to correct the frequently distorted image of a Republican-Southern Democratic coalition. We must also be prepared, when the facts justify it, to support Administration measures. We should be lobbyists for the taxpayer at all times, and critics when we must...
...behind the ear and down the neck to a point where it is spliced into the internal jugular vein. The excess brain fluid is thus dripped into the bloodstream, where the body readily disposes of it. Another Silastic preparation, which looks like a sheet of waxed paper, serves to correct a different type of brain problem: when part of the brain's parchmentlike covering, the dura mater, is damaged or destroyed, the brain tissues and fluids are kept from bulging or leaking out by a Silastic sheet backed with Dacron...
Many eye surgeons have learned to correct detachment of the retina by putting a plastic girdle around the eyeball and squeezing it back into shape. And Dr. Stone has implanted plastic tubes in the eyes of glaucoma patients at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary to remove the accumulation of fluid that causes high pressure inside the eyeball-and eventually blindness...
Questions & Exonerations. Worse are the omissions and persistent seeming biases. In his account of Russian unpreparedness for war, Werth does not mention that the Soviets received a clear and correct warning of Hitler's timetable from their trusted agent in Japan, the German journalist Richard Sorge. He gives no more than a sentence to the three-to-four-week delay of the attack on Russia that was caused by Yugoslav and Greek resistance in the spring of 1941, although that delay may well have been the most important single factor in the German failure (by 15 miles and some...
...Bewitched, in which Elizabeth Montgomery (TIME, Oct. 30) goes on "twitching her nose into other people's business," as the dialogue put it last week, reassembling broken vases, halting rainstorms, and engineering marriages through her special talents as an authentic but broom-less witch. If the ratings are correct some 32 million people watch this show each week, in which the same sort of thing happens over and over again- something breaks, the girl's nose twitches, the film is run backwards, the broken object is whole again, tune in again next week, same time, same staple...