Word: regretably
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...flux of difficulty and mastery in The Complete Stories by Flannery O'Conner come into a fine balance in "A Good Man is Hard to Find". There can be no regret that she spent a lifetime boning up for such a right moment...
...displaced Southerners, both black and white, about whom Coles writes in the second of his new books, The South Goes North. Four times Coles watched black Alabama and Mississippi families "slip away from the plantation or cabin and drive off with a look of relief and bitter joy and regret and sadness and triumph." Three times he went along with white families from West Virginia when they moved to Chicago, staying to observe the "settling in" process. But much of his time for six years was spent in regularly visiting ten white families in a working-class section of Boston...
...life. Some department centered faculty members fear some loss of standards, or at least loss of department authority regarding standards and appointments, if the Houses should take on a more academic role. Others worry about the possible exclusiveness of House-based courses. But most students and many faculty members regret the dichotomy that remains between the two aspects of college life and feel that ways lie open to remedy this defect and also to make better use of the great investment that has gone into the Houses already...
...this year. A number of black groups have been meeting on this and related issues. Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine recently voiced his opinion that a President could not be elected in 1972 with a black running-mate--a view he took pains to say he came to with regret. Since then, Muskie has met with agreement and disagreement from both sides of the color line...
...known our concern about the shaky condition of the Design School, and while opinions differ on its current direction, it remains clear to us that the School will never prosper while the bad taste of the past three years, and these proceedings in particular, lingers. We have noted with regret the lack of judgment shown both by the Dean and Professors Isaacs, Nash and Vigier--the three men who dominated the Planning Department in the decade preceeding the crisis of 1969-70. And we stand by our conviction that the interests of the School would be best served...