Word: enriched
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...Time Inc., contended that mass-circulation, general-interest magazines in particular "play a unique and indispensable role in American education and political processes" and must be allowed to be "vigorously competitive and reasonably profitable." Unlike local newspapers, Donovan said, magazines "have done much to create national audiences. They enrich our national dialogue. But the present quality, competitiveness and openness of the magazine field cannot be long sustained if profits do not improve beyond current levels...
...come. Look at that quiet revolution that has taken place in the South in three years. Who ever thought it could happen? It has. It isn't perfect; it's never going to be. Because black people are different from white people. They always will be?and that will enrich the country in the long run. But what we have to realize is that whether it is relations between the races or relations between the generations, this country is, in my view, doing very well...
...Blacks do not want to exchange their culture for white culture. All they are demanding is their constitutional right to attend schools of far better standing than those of the ghetto. Education will then give black people the "tool" to further enrich their own culture...
...thriving agricultural and industrial community. Later this month Boeing will begin construction of a 42-in. irrigation pipeline. The company plans to plant a potato crop in March, and it has sublet part of the tract to Japanese chicken growers, who will use the land to grow alfalfa. To enrich the sandy soil. Boeing and a Portland group, Columbia Processors Cooperative, are experimenting with a fertilizer made from Portland's waste products. "Even for the Boeing Co.," says Aerospace Vice President Oliver Boileau, "it's never too late to start hauling manure, irrigating land and planting potatoes...
...book whose theme is liberation, it is a curiously willed performance. Forster for once displays a one-tract mind. He does not commit anything as crude as a case history, but he flogs the narrative along in a straight line largely unadorned by the surprises and ambiguities that enrich his other plots. Boy meets boy, boy loses boy, second boy meets girl and takes up "normal" life, first boy meets another boy and affirms homosexual values in the face of hostile society. A prim sense of authorial constraint weighs on every page. The irony is that when Forster wrote obliquely...