Word: fair
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Benham, Crimson coach Lloyd Jordan has said, "Only rain, lightning and thunder can stop him." Unfortunately for the Crimson, the forecast for New York today is fair, with the temperature between...
...down to earth and make use of decent part of the education you could get in this fair city. Ruth Davis...
...foreign affairs, Eisenhower has done more than echo the traditions of the New and Fair Deals. When he has personally taken over the duties of Secretary of State, he has been able to take actions that no Democrat, however much he might have wanted to, could have afforded to take. The President accepted a Korean truce on terms that Stevenson, had he been in the White House, would probably have been forced to reject in order to prove to the country that he was a loyal American. The President calmed down the country when the Chinese shot at airplanes...
...Adlai Stevenson getting a fair shake from what the Democrats like to call the "one-party press"? Editor & Publisher put the question last week to the Democratic candidate himself. Said Stevenson: "Newspaper coverage of my 1956 campaign has been generally good. In fact, I think it has been better than in 1952. Almost all the newspapermen traveling with me have consistently turned in excellent reports, reports that are as complete and well-written as the rigors of campaigning permit, reports which I think fairly represent what I have said and done . . . [But] there are still far too many...
...Winchellisms ("The land you love, the love you land"), clowned edgily around a stage clogged with celebrities (Sammy Davis Jr., Joe DiMaggio, Martha Raye, Dorothy Kilgallen) who did nothing much but stand around being celebrities. But the singers worked to good effect: Lola Fisher, understudy for Julie (My Fair Lady) Andrews, singing I Could Have Danced All Night as if she could have; Perry Como's cool, limp delivery of new lyrics to Debussy's Claire de Lune...