Word: again-and
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...Pennsylvania Avenue. Jack and Jackie Kennedy's talent for serving up a dazzling concoction of beauty and brains, politics and culture, shamrocks and chandeliers is enough to boggle the most jaded eyes. Last week, at a couple of brilliant levees, the President and his First Lady did it again-and again...
...Urging. But, apparently almost overnight, Jack Kennedy had some second thoughts. Next day at Glen Ora, the rented Kennedy estate in Middleburg, Va., the President conferred with Stevenson again-and this time Kennedy strongly urged Adlai to stay at the U.N. He said Adlai would have a tough fight against Dirksen, particularly in the downstate counties; even if he won, and could wangle a seat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, his influence as a junior Senator would still be negligible...
...Rules Committee. Next, Udall stirred up a minor fuss by bluntly advising the Washington Redskins pro football team to sign on some Negro players if it wants to use the new District of Columbia stadium that Interior has built as part of its parks system. Last week Udall blazed away again-and was blown out of the saddle by a fusillade from friend and foe alike...
...domestic front, said John F. Kennedy, the economy "is in trouble." Unemployment is increasing, the recession worsening, the rate of economic growth lagging, bankruptcies booming, profits fading. In a special message to Congress (see The Economy), he prescribed a course of remedies to get things going again-and promised more if those did not work...
...vote reddened the sore of the split and emphasized the powerful resources of the conservatives even under intense pressure. The cold realists in John Kennedy's White House knew that the fight would have to be refought on every major bill, that their forces might never be as strong again-and they no longer had the Rules Committee blockade as an excuse for failure. They buckled down to prepare for a grim era of whipcracking, blandishment and push-pull patronage to work their will in Congress...