Word: infant
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...rest of us avoid that which we can't integrate into the game we're playing. Rather than leaving it to chance whether an individual is stuck with a single imprint, as Leary thinks most of us are, he envisions a society in which LSD is administered to infant once a week. LSD works, according to Leary, by suspending the old imprints temporarily, and leaves the individual with a slightly altered weltanschauung. A child raised in such a way would be able to watch ten television programs simultaneously, as well as to perform more useful feats such as empathizing with...
...idea was all the more surprising because a) Britain has no intention of leaving anytime soon, b) the U.S. has its hands full in Viet Nam, and c) the Soviet Union is so monumentally uninterested in Lee's problems that it has not even troubled to recognize the infant nation in the six weeks since it was forced to secede from Malaysia. As for Malaysia-well, said the Tunku angrily, "Lee is talking through his hat. He has not got a head...
...book because it exploited "the piquancy of a situation where the son of a famous man is shown to be making damaging and disloyal remarks about his own relations." Actually, the suit was filed by Michael's wife Patricia, 25, since English law defines Michael, 19, as an "infant...
...colonies in the New World created harmony of a sort by establishing state churches of their own-the Anglican faith in Virginia, for example, and the Congregational in Massachusetts and Connecticut. That kind of "harmony" began to give way during the Revolution, when most of the infant states of the future republic dropped their legal ties to a particular church. Later, Congress formally affirmed the right of free exercise of religion in the First Amendment and clearly forbade the establishment of any one faith...
...Infant Application. The only easy way to gain entrance to most of these schools is by birth, although even admission by legacy is no longer automatic. Buckley, perhaps the most society-conscious of the city's schools for boys, encourages parents to apply when their children are born, and most of the top schools book their classes far in advance on a first-come, first-considered basis. Even acquiring an application form is competitive; Allen-Stevenson, which graduates only a dozen boys a year, does not send a blank unless it gets satisfactory telephoned answers to nine questions...