Word: deb
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Manhattan, Stanish flew to Nashville, where Mrs. William Tyne says: "There's no question about it; he made the party," and to Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. There Mrs. Charles McCusland White reports "everyone adored it; he talked as he worked, answering questions and giving out cooking tips." Deb Daughter Jane White pronounced him "just fantastic. My friends went back for fourths and fifths...
Testifying before a Senate committee last year, then Attorney General Nicholas deB. Katzenbach officially put Government spending in the cities at $14.7 billion. In the same week, Robert Weaver, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, reckoned that it actually amounted to $28.4 billion; and Lyndon Johnson, with lightning application of both old and new math, set it at $30 billion. This year, Budget Director Charles Schultze admitted to a Senate subcommittee, the Government is giving out only $10.3 billion in "federal aid payments in urban areas." Even this more down-to-earth figure is probably far too high an estimate...
...rent-a-cab." From that investment he can expect $100 a week-in a good week-as personal profit. He is unmarried ("I'm all alone in this jungle," Smith told his lawyer, Oliver Lofton, a former aide to Under Secretary of State Nicholas DeB. Katzenbach). He rents a one-room apartment in Newark's "Ironbound" district (so named for its wrap-around railroad lines), has a collection of 25 "cool" jazz records, and is saving for a plate to replace his missing front teeth (lost in an accident years ago). Says Smith, a quiet and articulate...
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Nicholas deB. Katzenbach, LL.D., Under Secretary of State...
Such is the charge by a special task force of the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice. A follow-up to the presidential crime report last February, the new study, led by Under Secretary of State Nicholas deB. Katzenbach, makes it chillingly clear that prison may be only a minor episode in the bleak future of U.S. felons...