Word: cooperating
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...face it-we're going to be living with the Kennedys for a helluva long time." This, according to one insider, is what the Administration did: One day last December, Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg had as his private lunch guest U.S. Steel Executive Vice President R. Conrad Cooper, who is the steel companies' chief bargainer and was Goldberg's adversary in the 1959-60 steel negotiations. Goldberg impressed upon "Coop" that John Kennedy wanted early bargaining and a quick settlement so as to avoid a surge and subsequent slump in steel buying. Soon after, at the A.F.L...
...appointment as a U.S. district judge for the Southern District of New York; Attorney General Robert Kennedy agreed, and sent the man's name to the White House. President Kennedy, in turn, sent the nomination up to Capitol Hill-where, last week, New York's Irving Ben Cooper, 60, suddenly became the most controversial of all the 102 persons nominated so far for federal judgeships by the Kennedy Administration...
Like a Baby. As the hearings began before a subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee, everything looked rosy. Manny Celler. appearing as a witness, was almost lyrical about Cooper: "I gained great respect for this literate, articulate and erudite man ... I am proud to say that he is a good friend of mine-not merely a sundial friend, worthless when the sun goes down." After Celler finished, a parade of witnesses followed to add their praise of Cooper. Then, on the second day of hearings, New York City's Association of the Bar, which had announced its opposition...
...began buying some of their clothes. Two years ago, they moved out to a new place of their own on Park Avenue. Jackie moved with them, and so did such customers as Mrs. William Paley, Mrs. Harry Payne Bingham, Mrs. Charles Wrightsman, Mrs. Douglas Dillon and Mrs. John Sherman Cooper...
...approached Australia. Glenn radioed Astronaut Gordon Cooper in the tracking station at Muchea: "That was about the shortest day I've ever run into. Just to my right, I can see a big pattern of light, apparently right on the coast." The glow was the city of Perth, which had prepared? a welcome for Glenn that was also a test of his night vision. Street lights were ablaze. Families turned on their porch lights, spread sheets out in the yard as reflectors. Taxi drivers flicked their lights on and off. When the lights were explained to him, Glenn radioed Cooper...