Word: trained
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Beauty Contest. But the stop-Carter drive has made only a modest start. Says a Democratic official in California: "What difference does it make if the train is going 30 m.p.h. instead of 60 when it runs over you? The results are the same." Carter's new math is intimidating. Through last week he had won 13 of the 19 primaries he entered and nearly 5 million votes-about four times the totals of Udall or Jackson. Even while losing the Maryland "beauty contest" to Brown, Carter picked up 32 of the state's delegates; he collected...
...will mean more hardship for Rhodesia's blacks as well. Salisbury recently forced 2,000 Africans to move from their tribal homes in the southeastern border area near the scene of a brazen Easter Sunday attack by guerrillas, who killed three South African tourists and derailed a freight train. Hundreds of other blacks have been awakened in the middle of the night by security police to be questioned or hauled off to detention...
...knows, for example, how to turn a dollar from "the jetsam set," those people who lust for cut-rate, damaged merchandise: "Bang the canned goods, put little holes in the shirttails," he tells the manager of his Railroad Salvage store. "Dent the toasters, nick the toys. Give them train wreck, give them capsize, give them totaled, head-on and what's spilled to the road from the jackknifed...
...Every man's Brecht turns out to be his own. The production of Threepenny Opera at Manhattan's Vivian Beaumont Theater, shaped with satanic brilliance by Director Richard Foreman, is abrasive, stylized and sinister. Brecht's message -sprayed on the stage like graffiti on a subway train-is that the underworld of rapacious thieves, fawning beggars and mercenary prostitutes is an exact mirror image of property-minded, shark-toothed bourgeois society...
...argues that the Federal Government should reverse its present policy against stockpiling and start building up reserves of food. His concern was echoed last week by other scientists and officials who testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the impact of world environment on foreign policy. Said Russell Train, director of the Environmental Protection Agency: "The stresses generated hi a hungry world will not stop at our borders. We are part of an interdependent world." Should there be major agricultural disasters in the U.S., Asia and the Soviet Union, warned Stanford University Biologist Paul Ehrlich, "our problems of foreign...