Word: annually
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...phase out two-thirds of the present heavy-bomber force by 1971; 3) all McNamara's research and development projects, present and pending; and 4) his policy of closing or reducing military installations that he regards as surplus. All this will be in addition to the normal annual series of hearings on the budget, which this year will certainly concentrate on Viet Nam. Said one member of the Armed Services Committee: "We're going to work him over...
...energetic and talented First Lady has opened a new door in the dream of total conservation," cheered the National Wildlife Federation and the Sears-Roebuck Foundation. And so they presented Lady Bird Johnson with the first annual Whooping Crane Award for "distinguished service to conservation." Other whoopers went to New York's Governor Nelson Rockefeller, Idaho's Senator Frank Church, the Outdoor Writers Association and General Electric Co., but it was Lady Bird who soared in her acceptance speech. "The psalms and the poetry throughout our history recount the strength from the hills," she said. "Thank...
...swarmed over the luxury yachts to ogle the bulkhead-to-bulkhead carpeting and built-in barbecue grills. But potential buyers at Manhattan's 56th National Boat Show were most interested in the small boats, the fastest-selling items in a sport that has 8,000,000 devotees and annual sales of $2.6 billion...
...couple of months ago Gardner Ackley, present chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, remarked that "You're soon going to hear a lot more about guidelines." Rarely has any prophet been proved so accurately occult. And last week, as Ackley and his colleagues worked on their annual economic report, they could only be aware that some changes may have to be made in both the principles and the application of the wage-price guidelines...
Last week, however, Simon was the toast of Pittsburgh. Reason: he had moved to head off a takeover by somebody else. For two weeks, Crucible Steel, a specialty company with $300 million annual sales in alloys, stainless, tool and carbon steels, had been one of Wall Street's most active stocks; Crucible's stock fluctuated over a ten-point range. Then the reason came clear. Headed by Chicago Industrialist Morris J. Rubin, who helped engineer a takeover 21 months ago of the U.S. Smelting, Refining & Mining Co., a Crucible-minded "Stockholders Committee for Better Management" was buying Crucible...