Word: heard
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...should bring dissenters into policy discussions, not freeze them out. We should invite constructive criticism, not only because the critics have a right to be heard, but also because they often have something worth hearing. And this brings me to another, related point: the President cannot isolate himself from the great intellectual ferments of his time. On the contrary, he must consciously and deliberately place himself at their center...
Professional Collapse. Even so, the program was relatively understated, in tone and in the rhetoric of the policemen telling their version of the story. Here and there, the Daley show attempted to present both sides of the controversy. University of Chicago Historian Richard Wade was heard arguing that both demonstrators and police were guilty of excesses. Yet most of the footage chosen was shot from behind police lines. Not once did it suggest that dozens of police removed their badges and name tags to prevent identification and then assaulted demonstrators, newsmen and bystanders...
...have heard a great deal of late about the so-called nihilism of this student movement, about our alleged love of rebellion for its own sake, about the pleasure we supposedly derive from the very act of disruption. But if that is all you see, then you have a problem of perception. Such blind condemnation can only confirm the already prevalent suspicion that somehow you can't or won't listen to what we have been trying to say--that, come what may, you won't be stirred from your business-asusual complacency. If our generation in general...
...territories as the human anatomy, drunks, queers, and race (Authors Ray Galton and Alan Simpson even succumb to having a whiteman tell an Indian, "You all look alike to me.") As you might expect, the script is littered with countless unfunny versions of Western cliches (e.g., "Seldom have I heard so many discouraging words...
...announced his own intention last month of taking over English Electric. But Clark reckoned without Arnold Weinstock, 44, British G.E.'s acquisitive boss, who made his company the industry leader by winning control of Associated Electrical Industries Ltd. in a bitter takeover battle last year. Weinstock heard the news of Clark's designs on English Electric while vacationing at his Wiltshire farm, promptly began his own negotiations with the company...