Word: addresses
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...many times," he shuddered in a nationwide television address, "have I had to seat women whom I received at audiences next to me, rather than facing me, in order to avoid general embarrassment? Nothing should compel us to suffer such trials. It puts the nerves of men and the modesty of women to a severe test...
...down on liberal Jews; French Jews looked down on everyone. Author Blackstock even had to fight antiChristianism among her Jewish confreres, who warily wondered why a goy should take an interest in their problems. She may have wondered herself when one orphanage director asked her, on Christmas Eve, to address the children on the meaning of Christmas, and then followed her talk with a cutting denunciation of Christianity...
Apart from its economic effects, the needlessly prolonged stoppage pointed up a critical need for legislation to prevent such situations. In his State of the Union address, President Johnson promised to draft tough new federal laws to "deal with strikes which threaten irreparable damage to the national interest." No such legislation has yet been proposed, and until it is, the Government can do little but muddle through crippling work stoppages in the transportation industry. The Administration's next exercise in ad-lib arbitration will most likely come when the militant railroad brotherhoods hold long-postponed negotiations with companies that...
...average week, 450 people are auditioned by Mack's nationwide talent scouts, but only nine appear in the two-minute performances. Mack, 62, is so well known that when he walks down the street, would-be artists often start dancing or singing for him. He keeps his home address in New York's Westchester County a secret for fear that "I'll have every harmonica player within 100 miles sitting on my doorstep to audition." Former contestants often write to him, saying that they have children ready for the next round of auditions...
...will be holding demonstrations all over the globe in memory of the bombing of Hiroshima, and in protest of the Vietnamese war. A num- ber of the New York demonstrators, including A.J.P. Musty, are expected to drive up to the meeting in Connecticut to listen to Senator Morse's address...