Word: segmenting
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...survey began March 16, the day that Kennedy announced his candidacy, and ended four days later, just before Nelson Rockefeller withdrew from the race. Even while the New York Governor was still considered a potential candidate, he ran a poor third in the Republican segment of the Roper poll, which gave Richard Nixon 73%, Ronald Reagan 9% and Rockefeller...
...Presents-Part II, and the indefatigable impresario produced a musical program of a quality that television has not achieved in years. Pianist Artur Rubinstein performed Beethoven's Concerto in G Major, Violinist David Oistrakh played Bach's Concerto in A Minor, and the Bolshoi Ballet danced a segment of Act II of Giselle. Throughout the 90-minute show, both music and ballet were presented on their own terms-without the usual TV camera tricks and, more important, without commercial interruption. In the 60-second intermissions, the Dreyfus Fund simply posted its name on the screen and then chimed...
...musical segments, CBS Director William Graham focused almost exclusively on Oistrakh and Rubinstein, dollying and zooming around them with gentle art, highlighting the dexterity of their finger work and the rapt expressions of two of the craggiest and most variable countenances in all the performing arts. In the Bolshoi segment, he gave the home viewer the same kind of steady, pictorial flow that is available from a good theater seat...
...lead to disillusionment." Still, such analysts of the urban crisis as Director Pat Moynihan of the Harvard-M.I.T. Joint Center for Urban Studies (TIME cover, July 28) give corporations high marks for their active concern. "Business has reacted more openly and sensibly to the situation than any single segment of the community," says Moynihan. "Business has no commitments to fulfill, no hang-ups, no previous directions or declarations to defend." Some experts are concerned that the nation may expect the Corporate Establishment to provide panaceas for problems beyond its grasp. "Businessmen cannot do it all by themselves," warns Time...
...some places a loudspeaker would come over in a helicopter or sometimes they came up to a segment of a city and broadcast over bull horns that people were to leave their homes immediately because they were bombing an area. In other sectors no warning was given. Sometimes you had as much as a couple of hours; sometimes you had no warning whatsoever. Anything which ran out of these areas of course was shot as being a suspected Viet Cong...