Word: feeding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...amendments put the Federal Government in the position of matching, on a sliding scale, payments made by the states for the medical care of the indigent-meaning essentially those receiving welfare payments. The law went further, enabling states to create a new class of "medically indigent"-those able to feed, house and clothe themselves, but who would neglect their medical and dental care because of difficulty in meeting even routine bills and who would be pauperized by the costs of a major illness...
...North Georgia's Cherokee County (pop. 25,700), where many of Rusk's relatives still live, the reaction was tempered but unmistakably negative. "As far as I'm concerned," said Cousin Harold Rusk, 51, a feed and poultry dealer, "I'd rather people marry somebody of their own race." "But," he added, "that's their business." Cousin Ernest Stone, owner of a service station, was more emphatic: "I think he should've done something about it, not let it get this far. He should've prevented it." With the characteristic concern for manners...
...South America's republics have the highest population growth rates in the world, far outstripping their economies' ability to feed the multiplying mouths...
Many signs are posted in Glacier National Park warning of the presence and danger of grizzly bears. Likewise, at Yellowstone National Park the visitor is warned by innumerable signs not to feed, pet or tamper with bears (mostly black bears). However, one tourist went so far as to try to place a child, piggyback, on a black bear for photographic purposes...
...because Linsenmeyer seems to have no attachable assets. It was all too much for Jackson's wife, Billie, and after 40 years of marriage, she left him. "We didn't have a fight or an argument or a dispute," says Jackson spiritlessly. "I just couldn't feed her. I don't blame her. She could take the ups, but she couldn't take the downs...