Word: carred
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Even a Whisper. With Hanoi obviously unwilling to talk-or even whisper-the U.S. significantly stepped up its bombing attacks last week in an effort to reduce the North's capacity to send troops and weapons into the South. Air Force pilots destroyed a 60-car freight train and repeatedly struck an army training center near Hanoi-on one occasion getting embroiled in dogfights with 17 MIGs that cost one U.S. plane and possibly five of the enemy...
...them. Their leaders say that they will now concentrate on community action, and wistfully speak of a coalition of the universities and the poor-but that will not work either. The poor are not radical. What they really want to be is middleclass, and once they buy a car and make a down payment on a house, they will ignore the New Left and stick with their unions or political parties...
...Detroit's favorite yardstick -sales - the Ford Mustang is the most successful car ever introduced. And the men who were responsible for it are being suitably rewarded. Lee Iacocca, the Ford division general manager who introduced the Mustang (TIME cover, April 17, 1964), is now corporate vice president responsible for all Ford Motor Co. production and sales. Donald N. Frey (pronounced Fry), Iacocca's assistant general manager and chief engineer, the man who actually designed the Mustang, succeeded his boss two years ago as Ford division general manager. Last week Frey, 44, moved even higher. He was promoted...
Accident. A metal-crunching car crash shatters the silence of a warm Oxford night. In the wreck lie a boy (Michael York), mangled and dead, and a beautiful girl (Jacqueline Sassard), in shock but uninjured. A university don (Dirk Bogarde) runs to the car, recognizes its occupants as his students, and gives the girl his hand. As she emerges, she steps on the dead boy's face-an act that symbolizes what is past in her life and what is to come in the film. The don takes the girl into his home, puts her to sleep...
...author's refusal to consider the possibility that an assassin may have been firing at Kennedy from the grassy knoll in the front of the Presidential limousine. Manchester never even confronts the possibility that the bullet which killed the President may have come from the front of the car. He does, however, speak all too graphically of parts of Kennedy's scalp flying backward...