Word: dilemma
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...inflation, though the author concedes the necessity to hold down Great Society expenditures in order to honor the U.S. commitment in Viet Nam. While accusing Johnson of "politics as usual, promising everything to everybody and forgetting the hard realities," Brooke himself offers no realistic way out of the dilemma-which as eloquently as any argument in his book bespeaks the plight of the Republican Party...
Scrutiny & Dilemma. National has 60 days to study and answer the 2,200-page case record, will almost certainly appeal FTC's ruling to federal courts. Also studying it are other big grocery chains, which are now faced with a dilemma. Small chains and independent stores have revived so much that since 1958 giant chains have gained only .3% of the U.S. food market. Moving to meet such competition by opening new stores, the giants from now on will have to keep one eye on the business, the other...
...hostess (Eva Dahlbeck), herself a bored creature who slips upstairs to keep a rendezvous with an artist and finds him wearing her filmiest negligee. "Marriage," Angela muses forlornly, "is like falling asleep for the rest of your life." Though Director Zetterling often seems overzealous in deploring the dilemma of women, she times her surprises so effectively that moviegoers of all sexes, married or single, will have no trouble staying awake...
...unite the Negro and the white conservative under one flag. It is questionable whether white conservatives would accept pro-Negro legislation strong enough to wean the Negroes from their near-total loyalty to the Democratic ticket in 1964. But while the Republicans choose which horn of the dilemma on which to impale themselves, they can take solace in one thought--even though the G.O.P. is the party of Thurmond and Goldwater, and of the five states of the Black Belt, the Democrats are still the party of Wallace and Paul Johnson as well as of the Civil Rights Act. That...
After Contempt, Godard achieved yet another masterpiece in The Married Woman, a film, according to Godard, "in black and white." In this film, Godard attempted to portray the dilemma of modern women, forced to make "black and white" decisions in a masculine-dominated society, yet incapable of doing so. Godard insist on exploring every tiny aspect of the art of film; even the use of black and white film, normally taken for granted, is done with a purpose. Godard continues to make two or three films a year, and his latest efforts, Alphaville and Pierrot le Fou, while not quite...