Word: chatted
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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When I approached him last week in Dillon, he was sporting a fierce smile and was bandying chit-chat with passing football players. At the same time, he worked on a runner's injured legs as he danced from one side of the table to the other. After we exchanged a few pleasantries and a few needles, he questioned my physical prowess and then challenged me to jog with him that evening...
Coolly Correct. In private, Allende met with President Nixon's representative, Assistant Secretary of State Charles Meyer, for what was described as a "serious and friendly" chat. But Americans are not exactly popular in Chile. U.S. Ambassador Ed Korry, for example, has become a whipping boy of the far left. "When Korry returns to his own country," said the Socialist daily Ultima Hora, "it can be said with all justice and satisfaction, 'Yankee go home and don't come back again...
...Fidel Castro, pictured at the right with a kindly looking Harvard dean who departed in 1961, was not here in 1960, though he was in 1959, when he and Dean Bundy got together for this friendly chat...
...vote, and many candidates even donned that new symbol of rock-ribbed Americanism, the hard hat. Vice President Spiro Agnew appealed to the workers' fears of crime, drugs and bombings, and to their suspicion of intellectuals. After President Nixon had A.F.L.-C.I.O. President George Meany in for a cozy chat "to discuss foreign policy," Republicans made good use of pictures of the meeting around workingmen's neighborhoods. (Feeling that he had been used, Meany later roasted the Republicans in radio speeches.) On the other side, the Democrats and their old friends in the union leadership played up the pocketbook issues...
...height of the Cambodian crisis-the morning of the march on Washington protesting it-President Nixon made a surprise 5 a. m. appearance at the Lincoln Memorial to chat with demonstrators who were encamped there. The most detailed report of this appearance was written by Parker Donham of the Boston Globe, who interviewed moderate students who had talked with the President. They described Nixon as being incoherent (indeed unable to put a sentence together), sickly looking and somewhat frightening. One of those interviewed described the President as "a robot out of control." In any case, he stammered, broke off into...