Word: conducted
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...prosecutor and, currently, a U.S. Senator, Thomas Dodd has ridden out countless investigations on the tallyho end of the chase. Last week the Connecticut Democrat was cast in the quar ry's role, his political future staked on the outcome, as the Senate Select Committee on Standards and Conduct delved deeply and publicly into his affairs...
...dropping in on teas and barbecues. At one such gathering last week, Smith sipped ice water and gave his usual folksy, good-humored pitch. "I have no speech," he told 25 people in a mosquito-ridden Alexandria backyard. "I'm going to conduct the same campaign as usual. I don't believe in the vilification of my opponent. But don't believe everything you read in the newspapers, certainly not everything my opponent says. I'm not a yes man, not a rubber stamp...
...Detroit Tigers, Lions and Red Wings. Oldtimers still talk about some of the more notable excursions, which have taken as long as three days to make the 70-mile round trip to Detroit. Owners John Plegue and Harry Allor are patient but firm, and violators of good-conduct rules are banished-sometimes forever. Probably 98% of the customers are on a first-name basis with each other. And the small-town news at the Pump is far fresher and at least as accurate as that published weekly in the Anchor Bay Beacon. When the price of beer recently advanced from...
Whatever the President's aim, there is ample evidence that Americans remain uneasy over Viet Nam. A Michigan poll showed that, while 62% approved Johnson's overall handling of the presidency, 62% also disapproved of his conduct of the war; in Virginia, 53% liked the way he was doing his job, while 53% disliked the way he was doing it in Viet Nam. Yet another poll -one the White House does not discuss -indicates that the voters may want a different man for the task. In Iowa, the Des Moines Register reported that while the President led Michigan...
While rejecting the appellants' contention that Mrs. Davis' "conduct is today's norm," Associate Justice Otto Kaus declared that even today's "family magazines, which no one would think of hiding from the children, have for years played peekaboo with the female breast." In such a society, reasoned Kaus, the court cannot rationally rule "that a woman who exposes her bust for a brief period, without suggestive movements, before a limited group of adults of both sexes, outrages public decency by any and all definitions of that term...