Word: 62nd
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...page veto message Governor McKeldin rejected the argument that the fast-growing Carling company, which has risen from 62nd to eighth place among U.S. brewers in the past seven years, might force Maryland brewers out of business. He cited letters from Governor Frank Lausche of Ohio, where Carling's head office is situated, praising the company as "a good citizen," and from the mayor of Cleveland, describing Carling as "an asset to Cleveland." Said Governor McKeldin: "If there is danger of unfair practices . . . the remedy should lie in the strengthening of existing laws-not in barring an enterprise because...
...stylishly stouter than she was during her twelve years as the nation's First Lady, Mrs. Roosevelt confided that her greatest pleasure now comes from "work . . . and [having] no people dependent on me to take my time." She lives alone in an apartment on Manhattan's East 62nd Street, celebrated her birthday at Hyde Park with all of her children present except Elliott (expected later). For exercise she no longer rides horseback through the Putnam County woods, but often strolls over the countryside with her two Scotties, one a grandson of F.D.R.'s famed Fala. Looking ahead...
...penalties of being a dissident Communist is the entertainment of all sorts of inquisitive capitalists, was in the midst of an even fancier social calendar. Ethiopia's Emperor Haile Selassie, first crowned head ever voluntarily to visit a Communist country, dropped in and celebrated his 62nd birthday in Belgrade. Later this summer, to repay Tito's visit of last June, Greece's King Paul and Queen Frederika will try out Tito's growing talents as a host...
Notre Dame's 62nd All-America. left the theater "kind of choked up" all over again. "I mean I got a big bang out of it. I was ready to kill anybody who said a word against Notre Dame. I still...
During its 62nd annual Continental Congress in Washington, the Daughters of the American Revolution announced that they had accepted proof that Private Benjamin Doud, born May 10, 1761 in Middletown, Conn., was a direct ancestor of Mamie Doud Eisenhower. The First Lady was forthwith welcomed into the D.A.R., and some 4,000 of the ladies trooped to the White House to welcome their newest member. It was the biggest White House reception since the inauguration, and marked the end of a 15-year rift between the White House and the D.A.R. The spat started when the late F.D.R. once welcomed...