Word: different
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...true that the synchronization of lips in dubbed films varies widely in quality. But, despite Crowther, even the most skillful jobs are pretty readily detectable as such. And few things so easily destroy illusion in cinema as faulty synchronization of the soundtrack. Besides, languages differ vastly in the time it takes to express the same idea; yet dubbing imposes a temporal sameness, which often cannot be achieved without taking unwarranted liberties with the original text...
Whatever else they may differ about, Vice President Richard Nixon and Senator Jack Kennedy agree that U.S. farmers have big crop problems-and a big crop of votes. So far, neither candidate has offered any convincing solution for farmers' problems, but both have eagerly set about trying to harvest the votes...
...first to snap back at Mackie. Said President Romney: "In the matter of compact-car safety, 400 major U.S. insurance companies do not agree with Mr. Mackie. They offer a 10% lower rate for compact cars. Such compact factors as relative power, headlight and seating arrangement, etc., do not differ significantly [from the big cars]. The big-size differential is in the elimination of extensive front and rear overhang, which reduce vision and decrease handling ease. As to long-range car use and tax revenue, the compacts have greatly stimulated the automobile business...
...more divorces among film stars than among dentists, only more publicity. But, faced with never-ending divorce bulletins from Hollywood, puritans are certain that actors, unlike decent people, have the morals of hamsters. Cynics feel that actors-like hamsters-have the same unsteady morals as decent people, differ merely in having too much time, money and inclination. Psychologists set forth that anyone who becomes an actor in the first place must be a narcissist, yearning for ever-new romantic mirrors to provide adoration. Whatever the truth, from Hollywood last week the sound of distant sundering was louder than usual...
...freshman Senator. Neuberger sometimes dared to differ with Wayne Morse. This violated the Morse Code, which decreed that junior partners must be obedient and silent. Inevitably, the Morse-berger team (TIME cover, Jan. 17, 1955) fell apart. After his apparent victory over cancer, Dick Neuberger was hailed on the Senate floor by his colleagues, and even irascible Senator Morse agreed to bury his feud. But not for long-within six months he was hacking away at his colleague once more. Dick Neuberger, wearied and mellowed by his fight for life, refused to strike back. Last January Morse announced that...