Word: marching
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...interests of clarity or simplicity; veteran readers may recall that in 1961 National Affairs and Foreign News emerged as The Nation and The World. Sometimes new sections are created, others abandoned, older ones revived. The Law, for example, which was present in TIME'S first issue in March 1923, all but disappeared a few years later, then reappeared in 1963. In 1958, TV & Radio was absorbed by Show Business; Television took over in October...
...couple of fundraisers to offset the $3.5 million deficit left from Robert's presidential primary campaign. Gradually his humor and sprightliness returned. But in front of the fireplace in his new home in Virginia, into which he moved with his wife Joan and their three children last March, he appeared distant and dreamy when the subject of his future came up. Frequently, the talk centered on the Senate and his role in it. He was generally pleased with his performance so far, he told one friend. But: "I want to establish more of a record." In the wake...
...hundred and fifty freshman girls and two hundred and fifty transfer girls will be accepted by Yale for next year. The freshman applications are due on January 20 and the rest on March...
...quite simple to show your loyalty to the liberal version of civil rights: all you have do is to declare your opposition to SDS--or its tactics. But how do you propose to demonstrate you are against the war? Did you sign a petition? March for a SANE nuclear policy? Support McCarthy? I don't pretend to have complete answers for these dilemmas, nor do I claim that it is impossible to care simultaneously for the rights of Dow Chemical and the rights of burned babies. I do claim it is damned difficult...
Seamans was professor at M.I.T. in the Department of Aeronautical Engineering from 1941 to 1955. In 1955 he joined the Radio Corporation of America (RCA). Seamans was appointed associate administrator of NASA in 1960 and was promoted to the number two position of Deputy Administrator in 1965. In March, 1968, Seamans returned to M.I.T. as a visiting professor...