Word: hinting
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...privilege, or else tying that privilege to inherently limited situations rather than occupations. A more conservative interpretation of Douglas's notion of "testing" might hold that a citizen's investigative activities qualify him for a journalist's privilege only when he is acting as a completely neutral observer. Any hint of personal involvement in the case would justify denial of the privilege. Such "neutrality" is perhaps what Justice Douglas has in mind when he talks of Caldwell's "affirmatively pursued empirical research...
...Adelaide de Groot willed to the museum on her death in 1967, including works by Rousseau, Modigliani, Picasso, Gris and Bonnard. The New York Times's persistent reporting of this, over the past five months, has taken on the character of a vendetta. Sometimes the Times seems to hint darkly at sins where there were no sins-or at most only dubious transactions. But the publicity has caused a violent row over a great museum's duty to its benefactors and public. New York State Attorney General Louis Lefkowitz opened an inquiry into the "legality and prudence...
...most part, though, the interviews with both Protestant and Catholic leaders tend to the obvious; the hate, the bigotry and the small-mindedness are all there but that is unfortunately all that is shown. Nowhere is there a hint of why these people feel the way they do given. Notoriously absent in the film is any sort of indepth discussion with actual Provisional IRA members, particularly those on the lower rungs of the power...
...five members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)* will meet in a special session in Kuala Lumpur next week. Among other matters on their agenda is whether and how the organization should expand to include Burma, Cambodia, Laos and the two Viet Nams. South Korean diplomats hint that they will not only accelerate their plodding discussions with Pyongyang on reunification but also put out diplomatic feelers to Moscow and Peking...
THERE was a quiet flurry on the morning of Lyndon Johnson's burial. A little more than might be expected for the normal funeral in and around Johnson City, Texas, but no hint of frenzy. Death is a part of life there. The people always gather when one of their own dies, drawn together by the profound humanness that gives these tiny clusters the strength to cling, generation after generation, in the wash of the Great Plains...