Word: parentally
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Launched as a fledgling wartime venture in 1941, TIME'S overseas editions have played a major role in making their parent magazine one of the world's largest international publishing operations. Last week, as part of a continuing commitment to the world marketplace of commerce and ideas, TIME hosted 54 executives of major European advertising firms on a visit to our New York headquarters. The week included a series of seminars and informal chats with editors, writers and executives. Eric Sidler, a partner in the Charles Barker agency of Frankfurt, summed up the value of these gatherings...
...Administration. They are still suffering from the backlash against the civil rights violations committed by some overzealous agents in the 1960s and early 1970s. In addition, the FBI has not yet settled down from the inevitable turmoil that followed the death of Director J. Edgar Hoover in 1972; its parent, the Justice Department, has been disoriented by a revolving door at the top: five chiefs since...
...Clamshell Alliance organized the demonstration two weeks ago against the Seabrook nuclear power plant, MIT is an institution downriver, and Kresge runs a chain of five-and-dime stores. If you don't know who Pete Seeger is, you should not read this column unless accompanied by a parent or guardian. Suffice it to say you'll hear moving songs on banjo and guitar, played by one of the original contemporary folkies...
Died. Clyde Lilly Jr., 57, utility czar and chairman of the Atomic Industrial Forum, an international organization promoting nuclear energy; in the crash of a private jet near Washington, D.C. President of Southern Company Services, Inc., the Birmingham-based parent company of four southeastern utilities. Lilly repeatedly urged the full-speed development of nuclear breeders, claiming they would take care of the nation's energy problems for centuries...
...study, The American Family Report: Raising Children in a Changing Society, was based on a probability sampling of 1,230 households with one or more children under 13. It found that 43% of the parents belong to the "New Breed." They stress freedom over authority, self-fulfillment over material success, and duty to self over duty to others-including their own children. The study found that New Breed parents are loving but self-oriented, and they take a laissez-faire attitude to their own child rearing. Says Yankelovich: "It's not the permissiveness of the '50s, which...