Word: preferably
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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There are boycotts-Negro leaders prefer to call them "selective patronage movements"-against business firms that discriminate against Negroes in their personnel practices. There are rent strikes against slumlords who refuse to repair Negro tenements. There is the "sit-in" technique and its myriad variations: the "swim-in" to integrate pools, the "wade-in" at beaches, the "pray-in" at churches, the "wait...
...those who prefer their theater a little meatier than Broadway leftovers reheated for the summer circuit, there is always Shakespeare. Across the land, Shakespeare festivals are proliferating in colleges, in parks, in barns, in permanent installations that sometimes even look like Elizabethan theaters. A few have found it expedient to lard their offerings of the bard with other classics from Shaw to Gilbert and Sullivan. On the menu: Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland, Ore.: The Merry Wives of Windsor, Ro meo and Juliet, Love's Labour's Lost, Henry V. Season ends Sept...
...Costly. As for Russia, it will collect close to $10 million from an expected 13,000 British and 12,000 American tourists this year. But tourists from the Continent generally prefer the satellites because Russia has relatively few beach resorts and is costly. Russia really has less need of the visitors. Whenever it wants extra dollars, it simply sells from its reserves of well over $4 billion worth of Soviet-mined gold. Sales of Red gold in the West have been averaging $200 million a year lately, a fact that ironically helps the U.S. by lessening foreign demand for American...
More than three quarters of the students at the Central University of Venezuela live in or around the city of Caracas. But for those who prefer campus life there are two attractive and inexpensive ($8 a month) dormitories in the heart of the University city. The women's residence is affectionately called Hollywood while the other, its male counterpart bears the name Stalingrad...
Which do you prefer?" Placido goes on, mocking the television commercials to which five weeks in America had exposed him. "War Plan A or War Plan B? We have also War Plans...