Word: ince
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Clearly this poses something of a moral problem for the good townspeople; it's not every day that Murder Inc., offers to go public. But director Bernard Wicki for some reason keeps his camera resolutely trained on Miller, the victim. As the town, by quick stages, turns on him, Miller covers a reasonable--but hardly unexpected--course from confidence to apprehension to terror...
...invested $4.8 billion in plant and equipment last year-more than any manufacturing industry. Automation has transformed harvesting and animal husbandry. This year 80% of all U.S. cotton will be picked mechanically v. only 1% at the end of World War II. One company, two-year-old Gates Cyclo Inc., has seized a tenth of Denver's egg market with an automated egg "factory" whose caged hens are moved past conveyer-fed food and water troughs in climate-controlled circular buildings: the plant covers only three acres, runs 24 hours a day with a staff of 18. Today...
...boundlessly enthusiastic, ever optimistic. He was a rousing speaker, on and off the platform, and always willing to lend his talents to the causes that engaged him, culturally, politically, journalistically. He once described Time Inc. as "fascinated by the world around us, dedicated to getting that world down in print and sharing it with as many people as possible." In those words he also described himself...
What's It Mean? That's quite a sentence, with a sort of anti-officialdom, let-freedom-ring sound to it. When pollsters from California's Opinion Research Inc. asked Negroes whether they approved the amendment, 59.3% said that that was just what they had been wanting all along. But when the same pollsters told the same Negroes what the practical effects of the amendment would be, 89% were against...
Died. Charles Douglas ("C.D.") Jack son, 62, publisher and public servant, senior vice president of Time Inc., managing director of TIME-LIFE International (1945-49), publisher of FORTUNE (1949-53) and LIFE (1960 to last March), spearhead of Radio Free Europe and Project HOPE, Eisenhower speechwriter and special assistant (he helped draft the Atoms for Peace proposal), U.S. delegate to the U.N. (1954) and, most recently, founder of the International Executive Service Committee, which he envisioned as a Peace Corps of businessmen; of cancer; in Manhattan...