Word: tags
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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What was the purpose of this handsome magazine, born last week? Beyond giving its name, USA* 1, and a terse tag line-"Monthly News & Current History"-the newcomer did not say. An advertiser made the introduction. There it was on page 2, bought and paid for by the investment house of Kidder, Peabody & Co. "April, 1962," said the ad, "marks a moment of importance in the history of the U.S. press. It witnesses the first issue of ... this thoughtful new journal of news perspective written and edited for an educated, responsible audience...
...estate falls partly to Viridiana, partly to Jorge, the uncle's practical, unprincipled, illegitimate son. Jorge works hard to make his half of the hacienda a paying proposition. Viridiana turns her half into a refuge for the rag, tag and bobtail of the province-beggars, footpads, lepers, trulls. While Jorge and his hired men work, Viridiana and her rabble pray...
...first things a student learns in English C is not to put enigmatic, infinitely wise, mysterious last lines on the ends of short stories. The attempt to give a story greater significance by attaching a pseudo-meaningful tag to it, simply doesn't work. But O'Hara can't resist this childish practice. "The High Point" ends...
...Washington's Republicans are troubled by their difficulty in presenting to the rest of the nation a party message. They point to their record of responsible support for Administration foreign policy. They are pleased by the backfire of the Administration's crass political attempt to tag them as anti-city and anti-Negro in the move to establish a Department of Urban Affairs. They note that the House recently passed a Republican version of a manpower retraining bill that even Democrats conceded was far superior to the Administration bill. They strongly sense a national conservative trend-but they...
...changed parishes about every two years. Thomas Lanier Williams was born in 1911 in his grandfather's rectory in Columbus, Miss. He and his older sister Rose absorbed their mother's lofty sense of status as the daughter of a clergyman in Delta country. Tom loved to tag along after the Rev. Mr. Dakin on parish calls and listen to the conversations. "Tom always was a little pitcher with big ears, and I think he still is," says Mrs. Williams. Years later, until the old man died at 98, Williams kept his grandfather with him six months...