Word: meaning
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Spiro T. Agnew veered more sharply to the right in a deliberate effort to woo Wallaceites to Nixon. At times, except for his flat Baltimore accent, Agnew indeed could almost have changed places with Wallace. In Woodbridge, N.J., he attacked "phony intellectuals who don't understand what we mean by hard work and patriotism." Probably not even Wallace would have said, however, as Agnew did in Detroit, that "if you've seen one ghetto area, you've seen them all." Certainly few could have matched his airy defense of the established order. "You may give us your...
...DANIEL: I do not think that a critical attitude to ward any specific action of the government and the Communist Party should mean a slandering of the system...
STUDENT FILMS are getting better, a little better all the time. A twenty-seven minute student film used to mean nothing but nine times as many Universal Truths as a three minute student film. Novice filmmakers have always tended to overreach themselves. Josh Waletzky and his cohorts did not, and the result is a film which makes one point rather well, instead of running after every truism which pops...
...need thereof, I mean of love...
...activist chairman since 1964, the insider has become a much more visible target. The key to the SEC's current approach is Rule 10b-5 of the 1934 act. A broadly worded regulation against fraud in trading, 10b-5 has been interpreted in the courts to mean that all investors must be guaranteed "equal access" to "material information" that might influence stock prices. In effect, it broadens the definition of insider to include anyone privy to information and requires him not to act on it before it becomes public knowledge...