Word: therein
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...architect. Though he seldom practiced his profession, he never quite abandoned its principles. Like Victorian buildings, his books were sturdily constructed, gloomy, and based on strong, pseudo-classic foundations -mostly imitation Greek tragedy. The film of Far from the Madding Crowd remains faithful to that arrangement -and therein lie its virtues and flaws...
Freelancers can only agree that the money isn't as plentiful as it used to be -and therein lies another source of tension. The New York Times Magazine pays $400 per article. Harper's and Atlantic Monthly pay anywhere from $250 to $750; Esquire offers $1,000 for the average job by the average freelancer. The standard fees of Playboy, Ladies' Home Journal, McCall's and Holiday are around $2,000. Even leaving aside special deals with the likes of Svetlana Allilueva and Theodore White, LIFE pays best-anywhere from about...
This was an accepted view at the time. None thought Mr. Rusk's formulation other than commonplace. He and others repeated the thesis--the doctrine of a centrally controlled and disciplined power guided from Moscow -- dozens of times. Implicit therein was a pattern of policy and of action. This had immediate relevance to Vietnam...
...Arabs, too, have deep roots in Palestine and an undeniable moral claim: therein lies the tragedy of the situation. They seized the country in the wave of conquest launched by the successors of Mohammed in the 7th century after Christ, and later wrested it back from the Christian Crusaders. Arabs have lived in Palestine for 1,300 years, and until recently made up the vast majority of the population. To Arabs, the Israelis are newcomers who in a generation or two wrested the land away from them. For the Moslems, too, Palestine has sacred connotations: tradition holds that the Prophet...
...however, the point of the article was that since the inanition of the current political scene makes participation therein unseemly and vulgar, there is a hellish need for something new -- before we all cop out. That LBJ might be displaced in the process -- or that the war might come to an end -- well, so much the better. But there are things even more important than that, one of which is the salvation of a political system which may no longer be worth fighting for. Lardner just can't see beyond LBJ or Vietnam. John Garson Research Associate...