Word: bond
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...been received into the Roman Catholic faith. "In my long search for truth," he said, "I came gradually to see that I could not find in the Episcopal Church the absolute and consistent principles and genuine authority so essential for true religion and for the imposition of my moral bond." Divorced twelve years ago and a grandfather, Price said, "I don't believe I can be a priest." Instead, he said, he would have to "start looking...
...House Judiciary Subcommittee, headed by New York's Representative Kenneth B. Keating, wanted to ask McGranery some questions about an earlier day. The committee was trying to find out whether the Justice Department was "improperly induced" to drop a $185,000 million mail-fraud case against Kansas City Bond Dealer Roy E. Crummer in 1946. At tHat time, McGranery was an assistant attorney general under Tom C. Clark, now a Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court...
There are only nine of these men in the University now. They come from the College, from the grad schools, even from the faculty. Some are athletes, some scholars, but all have a common bond behind the oars of a shell. They are the elite of Weld Boat House: they are the members of the Thirty-Minute club...
When the U.S. Treasury Department, seeking a stimulant for a Savings Bond drive, suggested a Moscow, U.S.A. version of May Day, the citizens were skeptical. But the university, which had just lost a college blood-donor contest to California Polytechnic, thought May Day would be a good occasion for a blood-donor campaign, too-and the theme became "bonds and blood." A parody of a bristling, Soviet-style May Day was ruled out in favor of a purely American holiday. "We wanted to show what Moscow, U.S.A. has," explained Chamber of Commerce President Del MacPherson. "It might be corny," added...
...Moscow was bright with flags and bond-drive posters. A crowd of 10,000 turned out. The parade was fine: there was a reasonable facsimile of George Washington, a flock of sheep in the Future Fanners of America entry, and a church window made of colored paper. The winning float was a 12-ft., papier-mache Statue of Liberty with a flask of plasma in her right hand and a sheaf of bonds under her left arm. One student marcher confessed that his crim son Cossack coat was really a girl's bed jacket, and one of his medals...