Word: intentioned
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...educational materials, systems and services geared to the technologies of the day. Owned in equal shares by G.E. and Time Inc., the new company will operate as a separate and independent entity. When the project was launched late last year (TIME, Nov. 26), the parent companies said that their intent was to combine educational materials with electronics in order to help educators solve their "critical problems...
...Tomorrow. Republican organizations in some states, notably Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas, have been moderate on the racial issue and receptive to Negro membership. Elsewhere in the South, said the report, the Republican Party in 1964 "appeared to be pandering to those elements intent on turning back the clock of history." The five Deep South states that Goldwater carried were those with the most disfranchised Negroes-many of whom have since won the vote under the 1965 Voting Rights Act and are registering overwhelmingly Democratic...
...financing anyone, any time," insists New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy. "And I am not going to endorse anyone in the primary." In effect, if not in intent, some 1966 Democratic primaries look nonetheless like warm-ups for an eventual trial of strength between the Kennedy forces and the Johnson Administration. Among the most significant contests are those in Wisconsin and Tennessee, where two longtime political friends of the Kennedys' are gubernatorial candidates...
Adequate = Zero. Gomulka had already vetoed a visit to Czestochowa by Pope Paul VI to celebrate a millennial Mass, but now he seemed intent on keeping Catholics of all ranks-as well as others-away. Visas have been denied to the 150 foreign bishops, archbishops and cardinals invited to Czestochowa. Polish tourist offices in Europe and the U.S. have been blandly advising that visas will not be granted to Western pilgrims, who were originally expected to number 3,000,000. One explanation: "The country will already be too full of tourists." As for TV and newspaper coverage, some 125 Western...
...along in a crazy rhythm, here surprised by a prominent nose, there by a bulging eye, now tripping over a clodhopper of a shoe, now stumbling onto a wretchedly knobby knee, all in a never-never land of ambiguity. Having attacked the canons of classical art, he now seems intent on undercutting the distinctions between normalcy and abnormality. The unsettling results seem to totter between a sinister vision and a deceptive festivity. Such ambivalent reactions suit Dubuffet fine. He long ago stated his own criterion: "Art should always make us laugh a little and frighten us a little, but never...