Word: feb
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Ford's optimism was particularly evident during an interview with a delegation of seven editors and newsmen from New Hampshire, where he will be running head-to-head against Reagan in the nation's first primary, on Feb. 24. After repeated prodding, the President ticked off the names of eight men as being "fully qualified" to be his running mate in November: Commerce Secretary-designate Elliot Richardson; Senators Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, Charles Percy of Illinois, and Howard Baker and William Brock of Tennessee; and Governors Daniel Evans of Washington, Robert Ray of Iowa and Christopher Bond...
Theologians too have shifted ground. Some have feared that the swing toward social involvement undercut belief in a God who ultimately transcends the affairs of this world. A year ago, a group of them met in Hartford, Conn., and issued a dramatic "Appeal for Theological Affirmation" (TIME, Feb...
...subsidized loan. Under present law, an heir to an estate of any size over $60,000 must begin paying taxes within nine months of the owner's death, must complete payments in ten years and must pay interest at 9% (the rate will go down to 7% on Feb...
...Adlai Stevenson in 1958 The presidential primary season is growing closer-the first vote will be in New Hampshire on Feb. 24-and twelve declared candidates, ten Democratic and two Republican, are eagerly campaigning for support. But as they jostle for early position, they are encountering a sad fact: the new rules that were supposed to make the primaries more open and democratic have actually reduced the system to a shambles. It seems possible that after the last primaries on June 8, all of the sound and fury will have settled nothing...
Though the A.M.A. has until Feb. 9 to answer the FTC's charge, it wasted neither time nor words in announcing that it would fight. "We think there is enough hucksterism in this country without hucksterizing medicine," the association said, speaking for 180,000 doctors. The A.M.A. maintains that ads would not necessarily lower fees and certainly would not tell the patient about the quality of medical care. The case will next be heard before an FTC administrative law judge, whose decision can be appealed to the full commission and, after that, to the federal courts...