Word: columne
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Vietnamese refugees proved efficient farmers, carpenters and tailors, and won over their Thai neighbors through friendship clubs and by giving to the poor. When the Thai government nervously decided to move against this potential fifth column on its sensitive Laotian frontier, the local Thais themselves protested. Vietnamese women cut off their hair and wailed; children lay down in the highways to stop government trucks trying to haul Vietnamese out of the area...
Coach Cooney Weiland have been encouraging his forwards to shoot the puck more,a suggestion taken seriously by center Jim Dwinell, who took a team high of ten shots on the Norwich goalie and found three of them in his goals-scored column. Weiland is also trying to revive a facsimile of the old cleary Guttu-O'Mally power play to patch the varsity's playmaking weakness. When a Brown skater is in the penalty box the forwards, for example the first line of Dave Morse, Dwinell and Bruce Thomas, will be joined by one defenseman and skate four abreast...
...newsstands last week, the weekly U.S. News & World Report reports the news that New York's Governor Nelson Rockefeller is all set to make a red-hot fight against Vice President Richard M. Nixon for the Republican presidential nomination. Leading off its "Washington Whispers'' column, the magazine confides that Rockefeller, advised that he can win, "is planning a handshaking, baby-holding, street-corner campaign for delegates in the New Hampshire presidential primary." U.S. News was caught with its holiday deadline down when Rockefeller announced on Dec. 26 that he would not make the race...
...traces, e.g., "altho." The "policy" stories began to fade away, and the news got straighter play. When Chicago played host to Britain's Queen Elizabeth six months ago, no one gave her a more cordial reception than the once rabidly Anglophobic Tribune. The Trib's own news-column byliners and the editorial page at times even find themselves in disagreement. At the same time that Latin America Specialist Jules Dubois was buttering up Cuba's Fidel Castro on Page One, the editorial page, with far better judgment, was castigating Fidel...
...three-column box, the New York Herald Tribune last week apologized for its able, veteran art critic. Emily Genauer. In reviewing an exhibition of 16 Americans at the Museum of Modern Art, she had labeled the work of Frank Stella "unspeakably boring." Stella, she wrote, "paints huge black canvases carefully lined with white pin stripes and calls the results very accurately 'stripe-painting...