Word: deal
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...pace, Humphrey will have to fight more vigorously to pick up delegates in the nonprimary states and to maintain a creditable standing in public-opinion polls. The Vice President began testing a rhetorical weapon last week-the phrase "New Democracy"-that may become his equivalent of "New Deal" or "New Frontier...
...tanks mixed with the pop of police tear-gas grenades. In a belated weekend effort to restore calm, Premier Georges Pompidou proclaimed on radio and television that reform of the university system was "indispensable," and promised to reopen the Sorbonne this week. He even hinted that appeal courts would deal lightly with already convicted student leaders...
...Kensington and country mansions in Shropshire and Wales-and two Shropshire dairy farms to supervise. Harlech commutes among them in a custom-built Gordon-Keeble sports car with a top speed of 140 m.p.h. (he has two warnings on his license; the third means suspension). He spends a good deal of time with his children, who are living, breathing catalogues of where the young are at. Jane, 25, the wife of the owner of a mod boutique named Hung on You, favors garish antique clothes. For her wedding in a Roman Catholic church (Harlech's children were raised...
...police were also shrugging off charges of brutality that had arisen from their earlier removal of demonstrators from the occupied campus buildings. After conducting his own investigation. Commissioner Howard Leary insisted that force had been necessary because his men encountered "a good deal of resistance" in entering the buildings. A broader-and presumably more disinterested-study of the disturbances was being conducted by a five-man fact-finding committee appointed by the university and headed by Harvard Law Professor Archibald Cox, former U.S. Solicitor General...
...nothing directly to do with prosecution of the war in Viet Nam. Most of its work consists of evaluating the effectiveness of weapons systems for the Department of Defense, turning out independent reports that provide university-based advice on the use-and limitations-of specific armaments. The reports generally deal with future rather than immediate technical problems, and advice is not binding on the Pentagon...