Word: coverers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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NEWS that the Supreme Court had approved the merger of the Pennsylvania and New York Central railroads was warmly received in the editorial offices of TIME. Nearly half the staffers commute by rail, and many of them brought questions to Associate Editor Spencer Davidson, who was writing the cover story. Did the merger mean that they would soon be riding in newer, cleaner cars? Would the schedules be more reliable? Conductors less surly...
...Servant." Under the chapter head "Humility and Self-Criticism," there is a meaningful blank space. All told, Shepherd and Wren gathered about 300 quotations from Johnson-his folksiest and most fulsome. Simon & Schuster, which plans to publish the $2 booklet in March with a limp red plastic cover similar to Mao's, reports keen early bookstore interest. Some facets of Lyndonthink...
Rocky's first budget, in 1959, amounted to just over $2 billion. Since then he has impressively expanded the New York State University system from 42 campuses to 59, with an enrollment of 139,149 (TIME cover, Jan. 12). He has progressively beefed up welfare, highway construction programs and aid to the hard-pressed municipalities. But the costs have swelled as dramatically as the services...
...book in quantity without violating corrupt-practice laws, which were tightened in 1966 by the Tax Adjustment Act to prevent companies from making contributions by buying advertisements for political fund-raising functions. Already, 30 corporations have placed enough bulk orders for the $12.50 volume, which has no advertisements, to cover the party's $100,000 initial investment. State Chairman Monks predicts that with luck profits could reach $550,000. "If it's successful," says an envious Democratic Party staffer, "we'll be doing...
Rest assured, said the London insurance broker, "any ordinary boy of this age would have great difficulty in getting insurance coverage for a car like this." As it was, the underwriters were only too honored to cover Prince Charles, 19, all proper and legal-like as the owner of his first car, a six-cylinder, 127-m.p.h. MGC-GT. The car cost $3,120-out of the Prince's own pocket-and boasts such embellishments as an electrically controlled aerial and a leather-covered steering wheel. It has a bull horn that has already caused mumbles in the Noise...