Word: expander
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...spite of its extensive use by students, the Bureau surrounds itself with anonymity. William G. Perry, the director of thet Bureau, prefers not to expand but to work quietly with only those students who somehow find their way to his door. The problem is that when the demolition crews forced the Bureau to move from its relative obscurity on the fifth floor of rickety old Holyoke House to the pleasant white building on 5 Linden Street, more people began finding the door. Already the Bureau's staff of seven part-time counselors are often working full time including week-ends...
Greek & Judo. Each year more than a million people use the worn buff building that the YMHA now hopes to expand at a cost of $3,400,000. The place throbs with judo, handball, bar bells and basketball, but no other Y has gone so far beyond the swim-gym syndrome. With 50 teachers and 700 students, it has a music school that most universities would envy. It runs a nursery school with a waiting list a generation long, a mammoth teen-age program of art, drama and discussion. It teaches thousands of Jewish adults to renew their religious roots...
...harbor, build a port city - Freeport - provide school, health and utility needs, and bring in industry. But industry was not interested. All Groves had forgotten, says an associate, was "to make the place livable." So he got 100,000 more Crown acres, agreed to build a luxury hotel and expand development of Freeport and the harbor area. In all, cracks one old Freeport hand, Groves won "the most sweeping land charter since the Hudson's Bay Company...
...Bobby Baker case, unless he disassociates himself from that kind of hanky-panky, this country could be in for a series of situations in the next four years of wheeling and dealing and influence peddling which is unprecedented in the history of this country." Nixon also announced plans to expand his personal staff, taking on a press aide and possibly several other helpers. > Pennsylvania's William Scranton was not a New Hampshire entry, had no write-in campaign going for him, got only a handful of votes-yet as a result of New Hampshire may have taken the longest...
...lumber and zinc to musical movements and tiny electrical motors. In 1964 the makers of construction materials and machine tools will also reap big benefits from the toymakers. Planning big increases in their capital outlays, like most of U.S. business, the toymen in 1964 will spend $250 million to expand and modernize their plants...