Word: displayed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...life amid the rubble of a wrecked marriage. His conclusion is disappointingly flat ("I am what I am"), but in the process of reaching it, Herzog-Bellow ranges wittily, learnedly and perceptively over nearly all the dilemmas -major, minor and plain absurd - of 20th century man in a virtuoso display that is a constant delight...
...that can be measured in inches. The standard reply to charges of journalistic partisanship is to sit down at one's back copies with a ruler and figure out that Sen. Goldwater has received 533 1/2 inches of space since June to 529 inches for President Johnson. Equality of display is considered necessary, too; stories get similar headlines and run in neighboring columns, or they run under one large headline, with smaller "dropheads" indicating which story is about which candidate...
...perhaps the most prominent Negro state office holder in the nation, he employs a campaign technique that bears strong resemblance to the Kennedy style of politicking. He moves about with incredible speed, always shaking hands, always smiling broadly, and never showing the irritation that most campaigners feel and many display. As he rides along in his car, he invariably stops at street corners for brief hand-shaking sessions, and he shouts greetings from his car window to cab drivers and motorcyclists who pull alongside...
...large ink-and-watercolor map of Harvard, done in medieval style by Thomas Wright, a superintendent at the Med School, will be auctioned off at 5 p.m. today in the Adams House Junior Common Room. Wright spent 1000 hours working on the map, which is on display in the window of the Harvard Barber Shop. Auctioneer Thomas G. Gutheil '63 will begin the budding at $50 and proceeds will go to Scientists and Engineers...
...your October 15th issue you supported Bobby Kennedy's drive to unseat Senator Ken Keating in New York. The Crimson endorsement did not display the balanced and judicious reasoning, cool eye, and steady judgment usually so evident in your editorial column. Had you displayed your customary good form, I do think you would have been kinder to Senator Keating...