Word: ingly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...PSYCHIC STRESS is probably no more severe now than in the days of the stagecoach and the highwayman, said the University of Michigan's Neurophysiologist Ralph W. Gerard. "It is not long ago that a man, leaving the small safety of his home in the morn ing, ran considerable risk of being robbed or assassinated by ruffians, or jailed or executed by his rulers, before he could return to it. And the home it self was a poor sanctuary from starva tion and disease, from pain and pri vation and death." Things are better now, even for the underprivileged...
...Andrew Jackson. In a single Luzon province, 114 "political" murders took place this year. In last week's national and municipal elections, the Philippines moved on from the age of Jackson to the age of Roosevelt - at least on the slogan level. President Diosdado Macapagal, 53, us ing "New Era" instead of "New Deal" and calling for the support of "the common man," led his Liberal Party against the opposition Nacionalistas, supported by most businessmen and landowners...
...York City has just passed a new ordinance permitting a merchant to sell "any property" on Sunday if he "keep another day of the week as holy time.' But many a New York City storekeepe has long stayed open on both Saturda] and Sunday, anyway, reluctantly pay ing an occasional $5 fine when a police man checks on his trespasses...
Ginastera works over his compositions for three or four hours each morn ing. He spends the rest of his day at the Latin American Center for Higher Musical Studies, which he founded in Buenos Aires two years ago to provide a place where Latin composers might study without losing contact with the musical spirit of their continent. Teaching is a passion with him, but it is a passion he permits himself only because it allows him to continue composing. "I write as a spiritual necessity," he says, "and above all I want my work to be understood. The music must...
Loving parents gloat over the baby's encouraging growth and happy gurgles as they put him to bed. He is obviously in the best of health. At the next feed ing time, they are shocked to find him dead in bed. Such "crib deaths" happen in the best-doctored countries and to the best-cared-for babies. And most can never be explained. In the U.S. alone there are 10,000 such deaths a year, and they are so baffling that 50 U.S. and British medical experts met recently at the University of Washington to try to decide what...