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Word: facing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...entrance to the seventh store she paused. The wind blew straight black hair gently across her face...

Author: By Harry Samuel, | Title: How She Shut the Store Down | 10/15/1969 | See Source »

Glazer stated that he agreed with the "general orientation" of UCRA. Homans agreed with the UCRA statement that coercion should have no part in the Moratorium. Both stated, however, that the Moratorium at Harvard would not face the problems mentioned by UCRA...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: National Educators Group Hits Student Moratorium | 10/15/1969 | See Source »

...election next November, but must face an uphill primary fight in April, Goodell has managed to alienate almost all of the Republican Party machinery in New York State during one year as Senator. He supported Lindsay for re-election before the Mayor lost the primary, and has campaigned for him since then. Before he got to the point of criticizing the President on the war, he launched an attack on Minority Leader Everett Dirksen. He voted against the ABM. (He once approved a statement his staff wrote condemning the ABM by phone from the President's Air Force...

Author: By Deborah B. Johnson, | Title: Goodell: A Freshman Senator Bucking the Party Line | 10/14/1969 | See Source »

...MANY respects, Charlie Goodell is a classic campaigner. He is a not very-tall man with a slightly off-balance face and a large nose. He has the politician's firm handshake and a warm smile which only cools after you have seen him flash the identical smile at reporters, the President, starving Biafran babies, and housewives in Queens. One of his aides recently complained that he has adopted the Rockefeller's style of laughing: a big bellylaugh with his tongue hanging...

Author: By Deborah B. Johnson, | Title: Goodell: A Freshman Senator Bucking the Party Line | 10/14/1969 | See Source »

...early opponents of the Vietnam war at a time when such opposition was hardly popular, I view with a certain amusement the current scramble over the resolution on the Vietnam war by those who several years ago were mute in face of this example of the vulgarities of American imperial power. It is. I suspect, a welcome event that opposition to the monstrous Vietnam war has become popular and respectable among the Harvard faculty. But it is unfortunate indeed that late-comers to the anti-war movement display such poor understanding of the political limits of a university faculty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: KILSON ON RESOLUTION | 10/14/1969 | See Source »

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