Word: 32nd
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...ranking world bankers and top-level govern ment officials such as U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Fowler, unanimously elected Japan's Takeshi Watanabe, 60, president for a five-year term. At the same time, they also agreed to admit Indonesia and Switzerland as the bank's 31st and 32nd members...
Whizzing through New England next day, the President touched on every issue that promises to figure heavily in the fall elections except inflation. At the University of Rhode Island in Kingston, where he picked up a Doctor of Civil Laws degree (his 32nd honorary degree), it was civil rights. Before the Navy League in Manchester, N.H., it was Viet Nam. The U.S. will stop bombing North Viet Nam, he said, if Hanoi quits sending troops south. But it is "the men in Hanoi," he added, "who hold the passkey to peace." At Battery Park in Burlington, Vt, with the crystal...
Last week against fourth-place Toronto, Hull sent a 35-footer whistling past Goalie Terry Sawchuck for his 32nd goal in 34 games, as the Black Hawks won, 5-3. That gave him a 13-point lead over Detroit's Frank Ullman in the scoring race-and, with 36 games still to play, a clear shot at the N.H.L. record of 50 goals in one season, which Hull shares with Montreal's Maurice Richard and Boom Boom Geoffrion...
...ticket!" An executive who was stuck in his 32nd-floor office with two attractive secretaries tried to sleep there?but his wife phoned every 15 minutes throughout the night. Thousands curled up in church pews?and at St. Patrick's Cathedral discovered to their dismay that there are no rest rooms. "We've been sending people over to the New Weston Hotel for 80 years," said Msgr. Thomas McGovern...
McNamara's decision meant the striking of the colors of many of the most famous and decorated divisions in the National Guard and Army Reserve, probably including the 32nd "Red Arrow" (TIME, Oct. 13, 1961), the 77th "Statue of Liberty," the 83rd "Thunderbolt" and the 90th "Tough 'Ombres." McNamara put a stop to an old Army practice of awarding Reserve commissions to newly elected members of Congress. Said he: "We shall not tolerate traffic in commissions." More than anything, the decisions signaled a definite increase in the power of the Department of Defense, moving the U.S. military establishment...