Word: deeps
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...White House press conference, Ike, again observing his ban on personal invective, generalized his retort to Butler, but his generalization cut wide and deep. Said he: "I think too often politicians look into a looking glass instead of through a window ... I really believe you [reporters] are better judges of interests, breadth of interests, capacities and the kind of things we are trying to do, than some politician who, looking in the glass, sees only reflections of doubt and fear and the kind of confusion that he often tries to create...
...Argentine government's running war of harassment against the Roman Catholic Church goes on, fueled by President Juan Peron's deep distaste for anything faintly resembling opposition. Last week the Interior Ministry banned a scheduled outdoor Mass and procession marking the end of the Marian Year. While a substitute indoor Mass was being celebrated at Buenos Aires' buff-colored cathedral, Peron and his top officials ostentatiously gathered at the airport to welcome Argentine Boxer Pascual Perez home from Japan, where he had won the flyweight (112-lb.) championship of the world. That same day, the Peron General...
...founding of Port-au-Prince's Centre d'Art, which supplies untrained local artists with painting material and a tourist market (TIME, June 7). The two most impressive painters in the exhibition have in fact achieved a high degree of skill and sophistication while keeping their roots deep in Haiti's voodoo-impregnated soil...
Another editor in the deep South writes that "colored people will be admitted to the University as students sooner than most care to think. If it must come, then gradual integration is to be desired rather than a sudden flux." The University of Alabama paper claims that the entrance of large numbers of Negroes would keep the Negro "classified" in one group, while "individual Negro students will have a chance to demonstrate their ability...
Such apathy is not restricted to the deep South, for even in border states like North Carolina and Tennessee, the students are not excited over the issue. North Carolina's paper says that "desegregation will be no problem when it comes--whether that is next week or five years away." There are efforts to end segregation--a group of students is at work to end undergraduate segregation voluntarily before the Supreme Court does it legally--but there is no strong student movement. Part of this relatively tacit acceptance of Negroes as undergraduates comes from the fact that Negroes are already...