Word: reviewable
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...examination of what the U.S. has done during the past 25 years to bolster its defenses against a repetition of Dec. 7, 1941, along with a review of what has happened to Japan since that fateful...
...struck Kennedy first, and thus could not have been wounded by the same bullet. The commission decided that he was mistaken; that he had experienced a delayed reaction to his wounds. The Governor said no more about it publicly until early this month, when LIFE prevailed upon him to review the Zapruder films to see if he might have been wrong. The commission had merely shown the Governor screenings of the Zapruder assassination film, but LIFE gave him enlargements of 168 consecutive frames covering the whole shooting episode. As Connally examined them through a magnifying glass, he spotted details...
...York City, the most heated issue concerned the fate of Mayor John Lindsay's civilian-dominated police review board, set up last summer to hear and sift charges of police malfeasance or brutality. Most top politicians of both parties campaigned for the board. The police bitterly opposed it, and the majority (63%) of voters agreed that the board would inhibit the cop on the beat and send the crime rate soaring. The board was summarily killed...
Thus, with a Cummingsesque jingle, Designer-Philosopher R. Buclcminster Fuller, 70, set out to explain to the Saturday Review all that he had learned during his years since birth. The magazine had the temerity to ask Bucky to keep it down to 5,000 words-a paralyzing limitation for a man who can talk on for hours about his "dymaxion" concepts, geodesic domes, and practically everything else in the universe. Still, he managed. "I have not learned how or why the universe contrived to implode and intellectually code the myriadly unique, chromosomically orchestrated DNA-RNA, quadripartite moleculed, binary-paired, helically...
...reasons that Neustadt turned down a debate have been repeated endlessly, but they can bear one more review. His program for the "honorary associates" had been founded on the premise that everything these men said would be off-the-record. The Institute's undergraduate activities were aimed at bringing students into closer contact with politics; the rationale behind the associates program was that Harvard had enough public speeches by enough important people, and that real understanding could be better served by small, informal meetings. Neustadt felt it only fair that if men of public stature were to give...