Word: coverers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...response to many requests from readers, TIME is making available reproductions of last week's cover portrait by Artist Louis Glanzman of Senator Robert F. Kennedy. The black-and-white copies, 15 in. by 20 in., will carry neither the TIME logotype nor the magazine's familiar border. They may be obtained by sending $1 to TIME Cover Enlargement, Box 668, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10020. At Mrs. Kennedy's request, all proceeds will go to a Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Fund, which his family is establishing to support the causes for which he fought...
...must admit that I was sorely disappointed by your portrayal of the graduating Class of 1968. I ask you, what percentage of the graduates look like that long-haired, bearded, psychedelic "freak-out" on your cover? Our society is sick with the pseudo intellectuals, acid heads and hippies...
...solution will add costs to the traveler's ticket. Until recently the Federal Government covered 25% of the cost of airport construction. Now the Government wants out. The U.S Secretary of Transportation, Alan S. Boyd, recently proposed that, except for special cases, airports and airlines do all heir own financing, cover the cost of revenue bonds by means of higher ticket taxes and new taxes on fuel and cargo. Meanwhile, with expansions necessary and costly new construction planned, airports are already increasing landing fees and other charges...
...common problem for all airports is getting the passenger into and through the airport area in order to reach his plane. Airport access roads are becoming altogether too crowded, and cities are searching for new ways to cover the distance. One is helicopters, but they have generally proved uneconomical to operate. Cleveland this fall will begin service on a 4.2-mile, $18,600,000 rapid-transit spur that will convey travelers by train from downtown to Hopkins Airport. New York is similarly experimenting with buses that can go part of the way to Kennedy by rail. Most cities, however...
...began life as a superstory in the Atlantic, filling nearly all of one issue. A subjective oddity is that in the Atlantic, it seemed weighty and formidable, one of those worthy projects the reader sets aside for a time when his mind and calendar are clear. But in hard cover, the text seems brief and often irritatingly superficial. Wakefield's viewpoint wavers. At times he is the visitor to a small planet-aloof, amused, rational, watching the antics of the savages. A few pages later, stumbling into earnestness, he takes the tone of a housewife who majored in political...