Word: expression
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...proposal specifies compensation, however, for undersubscribed Houses. A dean would guard the interests of Masters who do not express great concern over the House selection process. The whole also remain secret, "to protect everyone involved...
...music, Hill feels, and not to the personality of the announcers. They feel it an intrusion to have the announcer interrupting with anything but the most formal statement of what it is, who wrote it, and when. This policy doesn't give the announcer much chance to express his own feelings, but most of them don't seem to want the chance. Even Salerno, whose daily "Jazz Entree" makes him the most consistently-heard of any WHRB announcer, says he has no desire to build up a fan club or become an "air personality." "I'd get all kinds...
...late President reached its climax with an Easter Sunday opening in Manhattan, a bit of corny religiosity that would certainly have brought a derisive snort from Jack Kennedy. Made in 1964 by the United States Information Agency for showing abroad, the film became available for U.S. audiences by express congressional approval after enthusiastic press previewers launched a crusade extolling its virtues in terms usually reserved for such timeless Americana as the Gettysburg Address. Though Years of Lightning can now be seen by all, it is largely for the moviegoer who measures the magnitude of an experience by the size...
...Faculty members advising Brooke may not all support him politically, one of them cautioned yesterday. Although several professors are impressed with Brooke and are willing to aid his campaign, others simply want to express their views to "a very attractive liberal who next year may well be a Senator," he said...
...readers who are willing to believe the unbelievable. Its story deals with a campaign to build a Korean War memorial in Hawley, a little inbred New England town on the Atlantic shore. Even before the selectmen vote on it, this modest proposal nourishes more intrigues than the Orient Express and incites more violence, including suicide and murder, than a Mafia convention. None of the characters ever fully escape their enormous and restrictive obligations to the story. But for all that, the reader may find himself wistfully trying to swallow Benchley's preposterous tale, if only for the bouquet. Benchley...