Word: expression
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...among the students of this country is traditionally passive. It is not that American undergraduates “don’t care,” or even that they “don’t care enough”; it is simply that they do not actively express whatever social responsibility they feel. Even at Harvard, which has served for centuries as an intellectual vanguard, nothing like the European tradition of university radicalism has ever existed...
...said Ike, has no intention of intervening, and supports sound land reform. The U.S. did, however, express its firm belief that the attainment of land reform "is not furthered by the failure of the government of Cuba to recognize the legal rights of U.S. citizens who have made investments in Cuba." As for the U.S. press, it "is free to voice its opinions on all matters, whether domestic or foreign; this, you will agree, is a freedom basic to the exercise of democracy. Unfortunately, recent incidents in Cuba make it quite clear that it is dangerous for anyone there...
...just a quickie." Retorted Old Hollywood Hand Ratoff in his fractured English: "Hokay. The blawdy baddle is on." The squabble, snickered the London Evening Standard, would have been laughed off by "the Great Oscar himself" as "the pursuit by the unspeakable of the unfilmable." Chortled the London Daily Express: "May the worst side...
...Shocked" can hardly express my feelings...
Until last week, the best-kept secret in the art auction world was: Who put up the record $770,000 to buy Rubens' Adoration of the Magi through London Dealer Leonard Koetser (TIME, July 6)? The Daily Express offered $1,500 for any clue, after nine months got the tip-off from one of Koetser's former employees...