Word: page
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...have decided that so widespread is the interest, and so important is the need to know, that we have added more Latin American news to all our editions. Readers may have noticed that in recent weeks our Hemisphere section, which in the past was often confined to one page, now runs to two or three. We have six fulltime and 28 part-time correspondents in Latin America, and we expect that attentive TIME readers, as opposed to most Americans, should easily be able to pass a quiz identifying the nationality of such names as Rómulo Betancourt...
Undermining Integrity. Then the subcommittee began releasing testimony which claimed that McNamara had overruled his military evaluation experts in awarding the contract to G.D. Witnesses said that Boeing had bid lower to produce a plane that would perform better. Before submitting a 32-page statement to the subcommittee, McNamara protested in a public letter to McClellan. Wrote McNamara: "The fragmentary releases of portions of the testimony of witnesses who themselves are only familiar with part of the considerations underlying the decision have needlessly undermined public confidence in the integrity and judgment of the highest officials of the Department of Defense...
...England and the South. But with the help of a Ford Foundation grant, two young artists, Ann Parker and Avon Neal, have been haunting graveyards since 1961, preserving the crumbling heritage in a less vulnerable form. Last week a show of 120 of their meticulous gravestone rubbings (see opposite page) opened at the Brooklyn Museum...
...Patient Enemy. As Nina, Geraldine Page climaxes a decade of steady growth as an actress, with a soaring, searing performance that comes close to fulfilling Tennessee Williams' prophecy that she may become "the American Duse." Ben Gazzara plays the lover with dark, penetrating force, and Pat Hingle's Sam alternately snorts at life like a pig in a trough and tearfully contorts his bruised ego like an infant who has missed the 2 o'clock feeding...
When Idaho's Senator Frank Church began his first term of office at the age of thirty-two visitors around the Capitol occasionally mistook him for a page boy. Now, six years later, he looks more than six years older. His black hair has thinned slightly and is lightly flecked with grey. But much of his youthful appearance remains. Dressed in sneakers and old clothes to help put the finishing dabs on a large entry in the Quincy Holmes Arts Festival, he was mistaken more than once for an undergraduate...