Word: nevertheless
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Nevertheless, this does not rule out the possibility that some groups within the Viet Cong may indeed be searching for a way out. It is most unlikely that the Allies will offer them membership in a coalition government, but some interim formula could be arranged that would ensure the Viet Cong continued sway over the hamlets they now control. Eventually, a solution could be worked out along the lines of the one that followed the guerrilla war in Greece, where the Communists eventually achieved limited political rights. Such a settlement is never entirely foolproof-witness the fact that the Greek...
Trimming & Scrapping. Although it had billings of $700 million last year ($445 million by McCann-Erickson alone), Interpublic nevertheless got into a serious financial squeeze. Just how bad remains the secret of a handful of top executives who own the company. They are willing to concede that Interpublic will have a loss in 1967, due partly to the paring of budgets by some of the company's 1,600-odd clients around the world. As the head of a new five-man executive committee closeted daily at the company's Manhattan headquarters, Healy has an ax-wielding mandate...
...unique ability to serve as interpreter between students and administrators. The pressure on the senior residents may not be deliberate; Mrs. Bunting claims she is totally ignorant of it. This is probably true, since senior residents in South and North House feel more constrained than those in East House. Nevertheless, the result has been to cut off one more potential method of communication...
...hundred-seventy-six years separate the Mozart from Piston's Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, completed last July. In import, however, the two are not so very far apart. Written in a thoroughly modern idiom, Piston's piece nevertheless has all the brevity, forward drive and essential lyricism of a Mozart horn concerto. Soloist John C. Adams combined a capacity for pyrotechnics with a sensuous pianissimo that must be the envy of all clarinetists...
...Nevertheless, the trend seems to be toward more demographic analysis and away from numbers alone. Apart from that, sponsors find CBS a little more expensive than its two rivals. Ratings success is spoiling not only CBS's time sales but also the established stars of the long-running hits behind that success. The headliners hold out for salary boosts that force the network to charge higher prices for those shows than their ratings alone would command. CBS, which bills itself as "The Network of the Stars," gets slightly more than $50,000 per average prime-time minute; NBC asks...