Word: implicit
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...apologize to Mr. Von Salzen for not making these points clear in my piece; but, as is unfortunately clear here, they would have swelled it to an unconscionable length, and were, as I thought, implicit...
...questions in untraveled places, Alastair Reid, the individual who so characterizes himself, is a poet and a European correspondent for the New Yorker. That this laconic and bushy-browed Scotsman has a lively curiosity is evident from first meeting; that he has been quick to follow its lead is implicit in his present affiliation with Spanish affairs...
...mistaking the impeccable technique, no ignoring the tense, if quiet, drama being played out within every frame. The America that Wyeth paints is only superficially the America of today; basically, it is a timeless place with timeless preoccupations. The long, long past of man and his earth is implicit in every Wyeth painting: his trees seem weighted by memories, his rooms are filled with ghosts...
Telstar brought the pomp and pageantry, and even a searching closeup of the Pope's joyful if weary expression. Yet the true awe of last week's opening of Vatican Council II lay in seeing and sensing the variety, implicit power, and sheer numbers of the bishops, patriarchs and abbots who paraded into St. Peter's to start history's biggest religious council...
Placing the Blame. The result was the Kennedy speech, spiritlessly delivered and political in its every nuance. Implicit throughout was an attempt to blame the present mushy economy on the Republican Eisenhower Administration. "The fact of the matter is that the economy in January of last year was sick," said Kennedy. "We have had a five-year period where we have been more or less standing still economically . . . When I came into office in January 1961, this country was in a recession. We have made a recovery from that recession." Near Kennedy was an easel of charts, prepared to illustrate...