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...direct threat to the economic viability of the state of California." Scathingly, Humphrey tells nervous defense and aerospace workers that "a man should not seek the presidency at the expense of the jobs of the people of California." His supporters have dispatched "worried worker brigades" from Lockheed to confront McGovern. Humphrey also assails McGovern for a lack of leadership in civil rights and claims that his celebrated antiwar record is marred by repeated votes for Viet Nam appropriations. "We were both wrong," insists Humphrey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: The Big Showdown in California | 6/5/1972 | See Source »

With their Italian silk suits, Swiss watches and flashing grins, the happy foreigners stood out conspicuously in Santiago, Chile. They came from Swaziland, Barbados, Fiji and other developing states to confront representatives of richer industrial countries in the third

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEVELOPMENT: Those Hot Chile Nights | 5/29/1972 | See Source »

Dubbed by its sponsors, "Confront the Warmakers", the demonstration was intended to duplicate the legendary 1967 march on the Pentagon. However, only about 1000 of the expected 3000 to 5000 demonstrators actually showed up for the march, and demonstration organizers were noticeably disappointed...

Author: By Harry Hurt, | Title: Confronting Warmakers at a Distance | 5/26/1972 | See Source »

...level decision-makers is certainly questionable, and the huge number of police on hand for Monday's protest seemed to indicate that the Administration is more concerned with controlling protesters than listening to their current grievances. Just as in the past, the "warmakers" remain well nigh impossible to confront, and the chief result of demonstrations is a deep sense of frustration and impotence...

Author: By Harry Hurt, | Title: Confronting Warmakers at a Distance | 5/26/1972 | See Source »

...Mystical Twaddle." Turning subjective in the last half of her book, Miss de Beauvoir forces readers to confront the old age that every man contains within himself, "just as," in Rilke's phrase, "a fruit enfolds its stone." How does old age feel? To Juvenal, it was "a perpetual train of losses." To Jonathan Swift, it meant "a state of permanent anger." Even the master exulter of all, Walt Whitman, was finally brought, in his own words, to "whimpering ennui...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Gray Pastures | 5/22/1972 | See Source »

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