Word: parentes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...strike was a landmark in the unfolding history of the New York union's parent, the 75,000-member American Federation of Teachers. In cities across the country where teacher morale is low, the A.F.T. is outstripping its bigger "professional" rival, the 765,600-member National Education Association, which shuns strikes and collective bargaining. Last week's strike may well stiffen U.S. school boards against the union. But it did produce phalanxes of traditionally timid teachers mad enough to hit the bricks like miners and dockers...
...still largely a mystery. Only a few were handed back to relatives. The majority, investigators believe, were tossed to sharks, or were stuffed into an incinerator at nearby San Isidro airbase. Almost every day, pathetic appeals are made asking information about the disappearance of a brother, a sister, a parent. The air force has repeatedly refused the attorney general permission to look into the incinerator...
...Treyz, 43, has clearly been the leading candidate for both. Treyz is the man who became head of ABC's television operation in 1956 at a time when ABC was running a poor third to NBC and CBS. Treyz saw eye to eye with Goldenson, president of the parent company, American Broadcasting-Paramount Theatres, Inc., who viewed television as a sort of mammoth neighborhood movie house with seats for 165 million. Goldenson and Treyz set about to win a following among U.S. televiewers by feeding them very much the same sort of fare they used to see down...
Today, the NSA delegates will hear Dean Monro and others comment on the college's role as a parent and the role of the university in national security, and other topics...
...teach her lesson, Mrs. Kellogg cam paigns ceaselessly against coloring books, against "art lessons" before the age of ten, against art teachers who reward copying and discourage imagination, and against the parent's temptation to cry out: "It's a man!" "All children are natural artists," Mrs. Kellogg says, "so why not let them be? Their art has a natural esthetic qual ity. All of it is beautiful, and none of it is ugly...