Word: mainstream
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...reported his gradual entry into the mainstream of the news-whether or not into the "mainstream of Republican thought"-we also noted that honorary doctorate, and we did so under one of the oldest standing heads in TIME. Our EDUCATION section began its annual listings of academic honors in 1924, 16 months after TIME'S first issue, and started using the title Kudos in 1925. The selection of a few dozen from among the hundreds of honorary degrees that bloom each spring has always been difficult, and TIME warned at the outset: "It is not necessarily implied that either...
...They." In a post-California statement, Goldwater adapted a phrase that Rockefeller had been using about himself, claimed a victory for the "mainstream of Republican thinking." Certainly Barry's ideas flow somewhat to the right of that mainstream. Yet only after California were many leaders of moderate Republicanism, including the G.O.P.'s so-called "kingmakers," finally convinced that their party was likely to nominate for President a man whose views do not represent theirs...
...addition, Novak moves too glibly over the substantive issues that divide the majority of Catholics from the liberal mainstream. He fails to explore adequately such problems as federal aid to parochial schools and birth control that threaten not only to divide Americans but to block an inclusive Catholic identity as well...
Delegates to the Washington convention believe that the Soviet party bosses suspect Jews of having divided loyalties, and want to assimilate them forcibly into the mainstream of Russian life. At the end of their meeting, the Jewish leaders talked with President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk, urged them to use their "good offices" so the Soviet government would be aware of U.S. concern for Russian Jews...
...will be less divisive as ecumenicism becomes more catholic. I am convinced that political conflict, centering on civil rights and poverty, will develop as the major source of group identification (in New York City and the nation), joining the Irish and Italians wth those already part of the American mainstream, dividing the Jews, and providing Negroes and Puerto Ricans a stronger sense of community. Although the melting pot, as Glazer and Moynihan point out, doe not melt away conflict and produce uniformity, it does continually recast the nature of the conflict...