Word: refering
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...picket lines set up that day in the administration building at Tufts. The reporter told me that these facts weren't very important since the story wouldn't appear the next day--it did. He also told me that he knew all the facts--he didn't. I refer anyone who wishes to know about my case to the articles which have appeared in the Boston Globe of December 7 and the Tufts Observers of November 17, December 1 and 8. In those articles my case is, generally, well reported in an objective manner...
...Palace chapel of infant Francisco Borbón Martínez-Bordíu, Alfonso and his wife Carmencita were designated Duke and Duchess of Cádiz. Franco's reasoning in restoring the monarchy was to provide Spaniards with a familiar anchor after he is gone. Cynics refer to the King-designate as "Juan Carlos the Brief." "Everywhere else," a Madrid university student complained, echoing an attitude common among young Spaniards, "they are shooting at kings or at least asking serious questions about what they do. Here we plan to restore one; it doesn't make sense...
...only interested in funding graduate programs but doubted that he would "ever tell a university how to do its business." Immediately after meeting with Dunlop, Howe sent him a letter in which he urged Dunlop to submit a request for funding as soon as possible. The letter did not refer to the organization of the institute. Dunlop never submitted a request for funding and it is unlikely that Harvard can get any money now unless it pulls a few strings...
...proper tragedies, The Best and the Brightest begins with hubris: the certainty of a young and ebullient President Kennedy and his New Frontiersmen that they constituted an elite, "a new breed of thinkers-doers" who could handle the world, to say nothing of what President Johnson was to refer to as "a raggedy-ass little fourth-rate country." Halberstam's satirical passion is to discount Camelot mercilessly-all the famous "pragmatists," the zesty lovers of power, the "lean, swift young men who thought it quite acceptable to have idealistic thoughts and dreams just so long as you never admitted...
Duded up in wide-brimmed hats, black leather jackets, high-heeled boots and bell-bottom pants, gang members actually refer to themselves as "The Family"; their leader, Garland Jeffers, 25, has inevitably dubbed himself "the Godfather." Comprising some 20 survivors of past street wars, The Family has two hideouts on a quiet, tree-lined family street. But they can be seen daily on the streets of Gary's worst slum, Midtown, hanging out in front of seedy pool halls and bars. There they ply their trade: collecting protection money from the town's pimps and pushers...