Word: fittings
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...choose 15 prominent men willing to serve on a committee to investigate controversial student problems at Berkeley. The University's Board of Regents, Reagan proposes, would then pick five from the group who would write a report which the Regents could, in the end, deal with as they saw fit...
...task was to fit the results into the intricate mosaic of U.S. political life, to consider the outcome of individual races and find whether they produced cohesive national patterns. The strong Republican gains across the country almost immediately indicated a cover story on the most interesting G.O.P. winners. Early Wednesday morning, the editors in New York chose the six cover subjects and asked for detailed reportage and analysis from correspondents in the field, particularly in Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York and Chicago. In every case, the correspondents involved had been closely following the race in their area...
...visually two dimensional whole which nonetheless occupies three dimensional space. In Structure of Arches, Smith uses a very different stylistic approach than in Saw Head. He composed Saw Head out of found objects whereas he designed the parts for Structure of Arches ahead of time and fabricated them to fit his design. In addition, Structure of Arches has no organic allusion, as Saw Head does. Structure of Arches is very angular and its conception has an air of calculated, almost scientific, remove. Nonetheless, Structure of Arches has the same illusion of two dimensionality as Saw Head. The total sculpture...
...Considering the state of the world -civil disorder in many countries, starvation threatening more than half of humanity, the uncertainty in the economies of many great nations, and a war in Asia that might eventually destroy us all-it is comforting that TIME sees fit to devote a cover story to two football players. Perhaps I worry too much...
...Americans' liberties-and blasting polemicists who accuse the court of "coddling criminals." A dangerous counterpuncher in any argument, Kamisar plays no favorites: he has fought American Law Institute conservatives who sought tough model rules of police questioning, while he "gags" at Supreme Court Justices who rewrite history to fit libertarian opinions...