Word: afterwards
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...effort to make sure that Chen went home with the right ideas about U.S. policy. Vice President Lyndon Johnson and his Lady Bird were on hand at the airport to greet Chen and his wife, escorted the Premier to the White House for an amiable chat with John Kennedy. Afterward, the President played host to Chen at a state luncheon. Kennedy was in high good humor-and full of probing questions that impressed his guest. Who was the leading military man in Red China? Kennedy wanted to know. "[Defense Minister] Lin Piao is now foremost," answered Old Soldier Chen...
...carried a scientific article by Dr. Lawson Wilkins documenting 36 cases in which girl babies were so masculinized that they would have been reared as boys because their mothers were treated early in pregnancy with a synthetic hormone to reduce the risk of spontaneous abortion.* Yet for months afterward, the Journal carried advertisements for this drug, marketed by Parke, Davis & Co. as Norlutin, which contained no word of warning as to the possible catastrophic effects...
...Afterward, the visitors toured the Observatory's facilities, viewing solar movies, photographs of the skies, the moon through a telescope, and the IBM 70-90 computer in operation...
...week's end he spent a half-hour with President Kennedy. Afterward, Kennedy made it plain in a lengthy statement that U.S. sympathies were with Furtado and that the U.S. would put its resources where its sympathies lie. "The overall objectives," said Kennedy, "appear to be substantially sound, realistic and in harmony with those of the Alliance for Progress." The practical proof: a Kennedy promise to send a team of U.S. technicians to the northeast, along with surplus food-estimated at an eventual $125 million worth over five years...
...column and clinched his hairbreadth victory.) The two men, soon joined by Press Secretary Pierre Salinger, sat on the bed and mulled over the early-morning statistics. There were no congratulations, no jubilation: the three were much too tired, and Kennedy's triumph was much too thin. Afterward, the President-elect waved his aides away and retired to his bathroom to shave, with a straight razor. In such homely fashion the great political drama of 1960 came...