Word: enjoy
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Want my advice? Establish a Negrostan. Set aside one or two of your Southern states where Negroes can enjoy privileged status. The rest of America can be their diaspora...
...Colorado. Conducted by the National Council of Juvenile Court Judges, the school is designed to help the jurists learn criminal-law procedure and adjust to the Supreme Court's recent decision In the Matter of Gault, which gives juveniles many of the same constitutional safeguards that adults enjoy. Because of the decision and recommendations by the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, juveniles are emerging from legal limbo. For years they were handled under a system that was supposed to treat youths almost like psychiatric patients, a theory that made procedural safeguards seem obstructionist...
Forbidden Fruits. Today, the quarrels of the past have been set aside, and both papers enjoy healthy profits. Not only does the Tribune (circ. 109,738) no longer needle Mormons; it also carries a lot of Mormon news. Some people feel the papers get along a little too well. For one thing, advertisers must pay 75% of the papers' combined rate to place an ad in one paper. Beer and cigarette advertisers feel that this discriminates against them, since they are not allowed to place ads in the News. Ironically, the News then benefits from the forbidden ads since...
Convinced they are rearing the Artur Rubinsteins or Peter Duchins of tomorrow-or at least children who will grow up to enjoy making music-U.S. parents are buying a record number of pianos. In 1966, sales hit 243,800, nearly 100,000 more than a decade ago. The company that is hitting the top notes of this financial fortissimo is privately owned Aeolian* Corp., the world's largest manufacturer of pianos, which last year crafted 50,000 units and grossed nearly $30 million...
Exercise of Rights of Citizenship: College and university students are both citizens and members of the academic community. As citizens, students should enjoy the same freedom of speech, peaceful assembly, and right of petition that other citizens enjoy and, as members of the academic community, they are subject to the obligations which accrue to them by virtue of this membership. Faculty members and administrative officials should insure that institutional powers are not employed to inhibit such intellectual and personal development of students as is often promoted by their exercise of the rights of citizenship both on and off campus...