Word: respondents
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...only a few days of combat. "Funds were allocated not on the basis of military requirements, but according to the dictates of an arbitrary fiscal policy." But in "our years in office," boasted McNamara, the U.S. has developed "the greatest military power in human history-with a capability to respond to every level of aggression across the entire spectrum of conflict." Tax Cuts. Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon provided the tastiest vote-getting testimony of all: a hint of tax cuts to come, provided, of course, you-know-who is returned to office. The U.S., said Dillon, was enjoying "the best...
...would rather Kerr had played the part with a stutter and given some feeling of the character, and by extension, of what it was like for England to have such a king. Perhaps it is because the other actors--except Lopez-Cepero--do not respond to what Richard says or does that Richard seems detached from the rest of the play. But, poet-king or no, Richard had consequences, and Barstow's production does not give us much sense of them, except as a few lines that people...
...local police and "rednecks" are also beginning to respond to the various SNCC programs. Hodes said. He described the community as "as tense as a compressed spring. There will probably be some more shooting during the night...
...Perhaps so. I think an age that found it necessary to give Shakespeare's tragedies happy endings more likely had difficulty appreciating the "high seriousness" of the play than the raillery. But whichever is the case, it is strange that Mullin should have expected a 20th Century audience to respond to Restoration with which, according to tradition at least, was too complex for a Restoration audience. And it is strange, too, that he should have relied on the spectacle and the humor for his chief effect, when he had an audience already accustomed to facing unpleasant realities whenever they enter...
...reason the obese subjects did not respond normally and automatically to the stomach's signals, say the psychiatrists, could probably be traced to deep emotional problems. Eating had become, for them, "a matter of conscious and desperate choice at meal after meal." Many admitted that it had been years since they could trust their senses as to how much to eat. So they ate heavily and did not know when to stop. All of which points up a new problem: how to retrain these fat people to eat on signal-and only on signal...