Word: championing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...they do perform the material with simplicity and in a relaxed, folky manner. Woody Guthrie's socialist hymn to Pretty Boy Floyd gets an authentic bluegrass treatment here, and Blue Canadian Rockies, an old Gene Autry tune, will bring back memories of the Hollywood cowboy astride his horse Champion, galloping through "the golden poppies. . . 'round the banks of Lake Louise." Two Bob Dylan songs, Nothing Was Delivered and You Ain't Going Nowhere, are done with unmannered, country-elegant restraint and are improvements on the original...
...determine for me whether John Adams or Thomas Jefferson shall be President? No! I chuse him to act, not think." With electors emasculated, party leaders in a few states pushed through the winner-take-all method of awarding a state's total electoral vote to the popular-vote champion...
...GREAT WHITE HOPE, by Howard Sackler, with James Earl Jones. Loosely based on the life of the first Negro heavyweight champion, Jack Johnson...
...such shifts become more common, many companies are taking extra pains to keep their executives happy. To protect its executives from high taxes on immediate income, U.S. Plywood-Champion Papers, for one, has taken to offering them deferred compensation. One of the best at holding onto its executives is General Motors, which is forever shifting them into new jobs. But not even the best can avoid losing an occasional man, as evidenced when Executive Vice President Semon E. ("Bunky") Knudsen, passed over for G.M.'s presidency, quit last winter to become president of Ford Motor...
...chicken in every pot," for example. The phrase was used in a 1928 G.O.P. campaign flyer, and was perpetuated as a Hooverism after Al Smith seized upon it for an ironic, scoffing attack. In any event, the term originated with France's King Henry IV (1553-1610), a champion phrasemaker of his day. He observed: "I wish there would not be a peasant so poor in all my realm who would not have a chicken in his pot every Sunday." Henry was also the three-centuries-removed ghostwriter for James G. Elaine's "plumed knight." He even coined...