Word: itemizes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Most of the reporters on Press Bus seven agreed that the most newsworthy item we could report first-hand was the enormous number of McGovern supporters in the crowd. Many thousands had been supplied with posters and slogans by the local McGovern headquarters, whose advance work for the Nixon motorcade rivalled that of the Republicans. But along the route there were also hundreds of hand lettered posters and these were the clearest expression of the mood of those who had turned out to say what they thought of Four More Years Among the anti Nixon posters were Robots for Nixon...
With the Greenfield collection at Japan House, scale and focus change: it is a triumph of the small. "Intimacy" here is more than a catchword, for nearly every item in this array-reputedly the best private collection of its kind in the world-was designed to nestle in the hand, and their ravishing tactile subtleties are lost behind glass. The largest are Suzuribako or writing boxes: a 16th century case with a gold-lacquer hare, or Kinyosai's delicately humorous image of a lady spurting ink from her mouth onto a wall to form the characters for "perseverance...
...television networks should examine the talents of Larry O'Brien. Since this Watergate affair, who else is better qualified to stretch a five-minute news item into a two-hour extravaganza...
...least $10 billion in the spending that otherwise would be likely, and would reduce the deficit by a like amount from the $35 billion now foreseen. If the President gets what he wants from Congress, he would have what Deputy Treasury Secretary Charls Walker calls a "retroactive item veto" over money bills that have already been passed. Aides are not saying what would be cut. Shultz pledges only that the Administration would not touch Social Security or revenue sharing with the states, and that it would squeeze merely "a nickel or two" out of the Pentagon's budget. Most...
...World War I, and his spry-spirited wife (Peggy Ashcroft). She is resisting progress in another way by making calm, matter-of-fact preparations to commit suicide if the government bulldozes a throughway across the baronial estate. It doesn't and she doesn't. This asthmatic little item would wheeze its way into oblivion but for the robust first aid continually administered by those seasoned troupers, Richardson and Ashcroft. The nagging question remains: Why do even the finest of British actors bother with this sort of stuff? Can one imagine a Herbert von Karajan conducting No, No, Nanette...