Word: deeded
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Pope Paul VI is an austere intellectual who carefully calculates the effect of his every word and deed. Last week, when he called the first consistory of his pontificate for Feb. 22 and named 27 new cardinals, his choice of the men to be honored was clearly an example of thoughtful Pauline diplomacy: there was a token of reward for almost every shade of opinion in the church...
Forces Foreseen. Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill was an intensely human hero. He was easily moved to rage or tears; he delighted in mischief and rushed headlong into many an action that he was later to regret. If he was an Elizabethan in deed and spirit, he was implacably Victorian in his ideals and dedi cation to duty. When he became Prime Minister at the nadir of his nation's fortunes in 1940, he was 65-older than any other Allied or enemy leader. He had held more Cabinet posts than any other Briton in history; he had seen more...
...eight days, having replaced a pro-Peking regime headed by Albin Nyamoya. Burundi has been Red China's major East African base for subversion directed against the Congo, but with the assassin still at large, there was no way of knowing who had put him up to the deed...
...hard facts of life. To make them more palatable, Lyndon Johnson added to his State of the Union message a specific reference to the continued goal of German reunification. It did not say anything specific, but Ambassador George McGhee hurried to reassure Erhard that the U.S. had in deed not forgotten the Germans. It was just like old times. Happily, the West German government's spokesman called in reporters to say smilingly that all the "false ideas" about U.S. policy are regarded as "clearly removed...
...President Johnson's State of the Union address, the Louisville Courier-Journal had a noble vision. ANOTHER MOSES STARTS TOWARD A PROMISED LAND, went the headline above the Courier's editorial assessment of the President's message: "One is constrained to believe that the land in deed is promised, and the leader is worthy." In Chicago the Tribune was moved too-but in an opposite direction. "The secular savior is to take us over," said the Tribune, "and give us the bum's rush up the road to his conception of the Great Society." Between these...