Word: stressed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...care: "We are not the party of today," they say, "Let us be the party of tomorrow." But to cite their review of Henry C. Wallich's The Cost of Freedom, "nowhere" do they, "provide a definite measure of response to modern problems. Although [they] stress the importance of change and creativity, [they] fail to specify or elaborate." Why do they feel so sharply the necessity for their movement? Because liberalism is inadequate, doctrinaire, stultifying, and "monolithic." They worry that "solutions should by default take the form of the gradual but relentless authoritarianism of the left...
During 16-month tours of 45 days aboard and 15-day intervals ashore, TT-4's crews learned to live with its continual sway and shake-for the tower was designed to give with the stress of wind and wave. The men also learned to put up with the constant, ear-banging racket of water slapping against resounding steel plate, the whine of generators, the mournful complaint of one of the largest and loudest foghorns in the world. But the food was good, and there was time for recreation. Men fished for cod, killed time in the tower...
...three roads open to Kennedy. He could pick an able man from the second echelon of Latin American experts (such as Ambassador to Brazil John Moors Cabot or ex-Ambassador to Cuba Philip Bonsai) and build him up to first rank by going to great personal lengths to stress the importance of both man and job. He could reach outside the ranks of Latin American specialists for a big name that would by itself prove the importance he attaches to the job. Or he could agree to Berle's terms...
Sales of their wines now virtually support the work of the entire Western Province and its 250 brothers, who teach in eleven schools, many of them completely or partially tuition-free. The brothers like to stress their education of youth instead of wine making, but cannot resist comparisons. Says Brother John: "Wine is like a youngster. If he comes from a good mother and father, if he gets a good home and good education, he grows up to be a good individual. A good wine is the same...
...Cases." Though Keys's theory gained sanction from the American Heart Association last month (TIME, Dec. 26), it is still questioned by some other researchers with conflicting ideas of what causes coronary disease. The main difference is that they variously blame hypertension, stress, smoking and physical inactivity, while Keys gives these causes only minor roles. But the army of Keys supporters is growing. Some of them are converted skeptics, like Heart Specialist Irvine Page (TIME cover, Oct. 31, 1955), who, with Harvard Nutritionist Frederick Stare and others, drafted the A.H.A.'s position paper. Keys's chief weapon...