Word: expander
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Selassie met with the ailing Bustamante, who is almost blind from cataracts, received an LL.D. degree from Kingston's University of the West Indies and visited Montego Bay. In an address to the Jamaican Parliament in Gordon House, he vaguely held out the hint of aid. "We must expand material and other cooperation," he said. "We must remember that many states today representing major parts of the world were once weak, but through a process of assimilation and combination have become strong...
Lawyers for the states and the Justice Department implored the court to the contrary. Don't expand the limited Escobedo ruling in ways that handcuff police interrogation, they said. Don't forget society's rights and Benjamin Cardozo's words: "Justice, though due the accused, is due the accuser also." Don't abandon "totality of circumstances" in judging whether confessions are free or coerced. Don't assume that "focus" is workable as an objective test. Don't expect judges to reconstruct just when the focus point was reached or whether the suspect really...
...Thornton anticipates a big expansion in the banking business; with Diebold locked in, a Litton salesman will be able to outfit a whole bank, from typewriter to vault. For its part, Diebold expects to use Litton's broad technology and fat treasury to expand. Under the terms of the deal, Litton will not have to dilute its common stock; it plans to exchange 1,118,000 "participating preference" shares for Diebold's 2,601,000 common shares. Though the preference shares are convertible into Litton common on a one-for-one basis, Diebold investors will be induced...
...slim majority favored a proposal to drop the present non/credit sophomore tutorial and expand the present junior tutorial into a two-year, more specialized course...
...other words, they wanted to know what Japan would give them. Before anybody could say "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere," the Japanese were dangling goodies. Premier Eisaku Sato and his colleagues promised to expand their aid for transportation and communications, ports and harbors. Specifically, the Japanese said they would increase what they loosely call economic aid-including war reparations, long-term credits, private investments and government grants-from $350 million in fiscal 1965 to $870 million in fiscal 1968, mostly for Southeast Asia. Naturally, Japan hopes that such pump-priming will expand its private business in the region, which...