Word: tactically
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...that Catholics simply be allowed the spiritual rights available to anyone. If an issue seems certain to lead to dissension, Casaroli will suggest that it be put aside while the negotiators move on to things they can agree upon. Pragmatic in dealing with the Reds, Casaroli knows that a tactic suitable for handling Yugoslavia will infuriate the Czechs, and varies his strategy accordingly...
...directed bank, now only a year-and-a-half old, Freedom National Bank is a symbol of what Negroes can do to help themselves, according to the president of the bank, William F. Hudgins. Hudgins feels that going to the people by taking to the pulpit is a legitimate tactic in his crusade to bring full banking service to a community where discrimination in the money market is one of its many economic handicaps. He hopes not only to gain new accounts for the bank, but to modernize the churchgoers' primitive financial habits. Many have never seen the inside...
...agreed with relief. He announced that legislation was finally being drafted to outlaw the pirates, probably by making it legal to prosecute advertisers who use them, or newspapers and magazines that print their schedules. Notably absent from his statement was any indication that the socialist government planned the simplest tactic of all: licensing legitimate commercial stations...
Ultimate Vindication. In essence, that meant that federal courts in a variety of circumstances will continue to review state court convictions just as they have in the past. But pretrial intervention will continue to be a rare tactic. There are, added Stewart, specific situations in which such intervention is permitted. One of them grows out of the public-accommodation section of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In Georgia v. Rachel, a separate decision announced the same day, Stewart, speaking this time for a unanimous court, held that no one may even be prosecuted in a state court for peacefully...
...peerless rhetoric he is now adding increasingly polished stage business. Just before he delivers a cruncher, his tongue licks from the corner of his mouth, his patrician voice rasps into a lower register. Similarly, the elevation of his eyebrows telegraphs the drop of a guillotine blade. Another Buckley tactic-when the antagonist has the floor-is to close his eyes, as if he is hearing insufferable platitudes, or to raise them heavenward, as if to invoke Aquinas against such patent sophistry...