Word: respecting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...binding on all. Thus, they fail to meet and understand each other fully and openly in the light of one and the same law of justice, admitted and adhered to by all. Mutual trust among men and among states cannot begin or increase except by the recognition of and respect for the moral order...
...best of these is the Washington Post and Times Herald's liberal Herbert Block (Herblock), 51, an implacable, fire-breathing enemy of all conservatives; he once drew Richard M. Nixon climbing out of a sewer. Herblock was slowed down by a 1959 heart attack, and later by his respect for John F. Kennedy. But the Herblock brickbats still land with thudding regularity-even if they rarely hit the Administration. England's David Low, whose brilliant wartime cartoons nominated him as the greatest cartoonist of the century, is far off form at 70. "The war," observed a Low friend...
...random question-and-answer session, Goodman had good words for: work-study programs, such as those engineered at such schools as Bennington and Antioch; progressive education ("We were sunk in the '20's. Everybody got chicken."); the Protestant Ethic ("but with a greater respect for the health of the body"): greater sexual freedom; the Middle Ages ("Why, you know, they had 162 holidays a year then. They know how to live. We don't know anything about the Middle Ages. Those serfs never worked."); freedom of teachers to establish their own curriculum free of administration supervision; moving classrooms into...
...face the '61 Ford in San Francisco for the first All-Star game, they will see the same broad-shouldered, chunky lines as last year. But when Whitey Ford cranks up and kicks out his right foot in the easy, flowing motion that American Leaguers have learned to respect, he aims to prove that the performance of this year's model is vastly improved...
Assigned to the Democratic campaign of 1956, Chancellor was so impressive that Adlai Stevenson offered him a job on his projected White House press staff. At Little Rock in 1957, he won the-further respect of writing reporters-who deplore most TV newsmen-with his candid and unmincing coverage, his use of the TV camera to help find sense rather than sensationalism. Called home to help on election night last November, Chancellor was given the Midwest desk, outdid Huntley and Brinkley in sagacity, and was one of the few commentators who kept saying all night long that the result would...