Word: vocalized
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...York's Academy of Music. This divergence from the Velvet's sound presented Reed in a new light, perhaps disappointing to a few Velvet diehards but generally well-received by critics and fans alike. Thus the formula was simple for all future tours: back up Reed's vocal performance with a tight set of musicians that could attract equal amounts of audience attention when called upon to do so. The remainder of the time their sole obligation would be to keep the audience rocking while providing the perfect complement to Reed's vocal interpretations...
...That a vocal minority thinks abortion is morally wrong is also not the main reason it has traditionally been differentiated from other comparable personal decisions and treated as a public issue. The main reason is that, simply, abortion is not a personal issue that confronts men, and men, for the most part, make laws. For men, abortion can be a political, philosophical and abstract question because it is never a decision they will have to make personally. When men and women discuss abortion--as I know from long experience--the discussion is invariably on two completely different levels: men, even...
...Yard to attend the Gabriellesque shriek. None was forthcoming, and perched on a Wigglesworth stoop, Young smiled and grunted his satisfaction. By next week, however, Young's plan was torpedoed by hordes of freshman imitators who clambered up among the gargoyles at the appointed hour, to wreak their own vocal havoc. Another crisis was at hand, as the oral abominations of the mimics were now desolating the Yard and the tell-tale grade-point average was dipping again. On a cold night, again at 3:30 a.m., Young once more confronted the erstwhile howler and appealed to him to resume...
...Father John J. McLaughlin, the Brooks Brothers Jesuit who was one of Richard Nixon's most vocal clerical defenders, will soon be leaving his $30,000-a-year job as a White House speechwriter and maybe even his flat in the Watergate complex. But unlike Rabbi Baruch M. Korff, who has vowed to campaign "for those [anti-Nixon] leftists and liberals to go to hell," McLaughlin seems to bear no grudges. In an interview last week, he admitted to feeling "rage, desolation and the bends" as the former President's case collapsed. But he also welcomed the sense...
...provided us all with an invaluable lesson in, and respect for, constitutional government. And the conduct of the American people has equally been a credit to the vitality of our Constitution. They have given Mr. Nixon the benefit of the doubt; they have not been swayed by the vocal minority or the powerful media; they have presumed the man innocent until proven guilty...