Word: birthday
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...great bundle of white mink. Arriving at the lectern, she turned and swept the furs from her shoulders. A slight gasp rose from the audience before it was realized that she was really wearing a skintight, flesh-toned gown. Then, in a sincere, Campfire Girl voice, Marilyn sang: Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday Dear Mister President-Happy birthday to you! This was a $3-to-$1,000 rally in anticipation of President Kennedy's 45th birthday this week. In the world of entertainment, everybody but everybody was there (except...
...York's two G.O.P. Senators share more than a party label, a liberal philosophy and a geographic bond. After taping a TV interview at a Washington sound studio, balding Senior Senator Jacob Javits, 58, and white-thicketed Junior Senator Kenneth Keating, 62. celebrated their common birthday-May 18-by puffing out the candles on a pair of personalized cakes. Thoughtful to a fault, Keating came up with a special gift for campaign-bound Colleague Javits, up for re-election this fall: two packets of foot balm...
...last ten days. He is getting a lot of words out." To show how well he was recuperating from his Dec. 19 stroke in Palm Beach, the senior Kennedy took several steps for his son Jack, who was in Manhattan for a Madison Square Garden rally celebrating his 45th birthday. But mostly he just sat with his son in a garden and chatted. Said Joe Kennedy: "I'd rather talk than walk." Struck for 2½ days by 700 waiters, cooks, bellhops and elevator operators, Manhattan's gilded Waldorf-Astoria bravely carried on. Accountants clapped j together tuna...
Lincoln's Birthday to argue that the Great Emancipator never meant to free the slaves ("The black men for whom he felt compassion but not respect have won the victory that Lincoln intended as a safeguard for the white man's civilization...
...each year in Barsetshire felt summer-homeless. But the novelist had left five chapters of a new book, and Writer C. A. Lejeune, former film critic for the London Observer, undertook to pick up the almost invisible plot thread. Fittingly enough, she ended the book with a huge 70th birthday party for Mrs. Morland, the dithery novelist who, readers justifiably suspected, more than slightly resembled Author Thirkell. After the last bit of cake has been eaten, there comes a final passage whose treacle might have been spooned by the master herself: "'Darling Lavinia,' said Lord Mellings...