Word: coverers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...marginally associating the University with a controversial view was what we found objectionable in the decision of Pusey and the Corporation not to let the Harvard University Press publish J. D. Watson's The Double Helix. And we earlier objected to the University's refusal to allow WGBH to cover a Vietnam teach-in in January...
...dash for cover is part of every man's routine. "It's a modus vivendi," says Protestant Chaplain Ray Stubbe, 29. "The men run for shelter, but they don't cringe when they get there." Except for an occasional case of what the corpsmen call "acute environmental reaction" (shell shock), the Marines at Khe Sanh are taking their ordeal with considerable composure. Only their unwelcome bunkermates-the rats-be come frantic under fire. When the "in coming" starts, the rats race for the bunkers and wildly run up to the ceilings made of runway matting and logs...
Ever since a U.S. Supreme Court decision (TIME cover, April 29, 1966) threw out Danny Escobedo's murder confession because he was denied his right to counsel, Escobedo has been in and out of court on charges of burglary, possession of weapons and drugs. None of them stuck, partly because his lawyer argued that ruffled Illinois and U.S. authorities were unfairly picking on Danny in order to get revenge. His lawyer made the same plea last week as he defended Escobedo against charges of being involved in the possession and sale of 59 Ibs. of heroin. This time...
...SR.N4 is four times as big as any of its predecessors. When it goes into regular operation for British Rail between Dover and Boulogne, probably in August, it will carry more than 600 passengers-or 30 cars and 250 passengers. It will take only 30 or 35 minutes to cover the 30-mile cross-Channel route, and will reach speeds as high as 70 m.p.h. in calm seas...
...Miller has never worked on an assembly line or run an auto plant. In his five years as president, he found it difficult to keep some underlings under firm control, notably the brilliant but impulsive Lee lacocca, 43, who heads Ford's North American automotive operations. lacocca (TIME cover, April 17, 1964) had been widely regarded as a candidate for the Ford presidency. Now, he presumably faces a decade of waiting under Knudsen-and one of Detroit's current speculations is what...