Word: following
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...making the course tougher for both instructors and rookies, Ailes helped give recruit training a higher priority, a good thing in an era when the foot soldier is coming back into his own. He shared in shaping the 1962 Army Reserve-National Guard reorganization and was active in formulating follow-up reforms now before Congress. The aim is a merged Army Reserve-National Guard that would be more combat-ready and much less a political plaything. The Army is presently the only service that uses the draft, and Ailes would like to reduce the Army's dependence...
When it comes to pitchers, says Bob Lemon, who pitched for Lopez at Cleveland, "Al could write the text on the mechanics of pitching. Why you use a certain pitch. When you use it. What pitch should follow another. Why it should follow." Lopez often signals for specific pitches himself, wastes no time yanking his starters at the first hint of trouble. In one game last year, Chicago's Joe Horlen had a four-hit shutout going after seven innings. "Good job," said Lopez, and packed him off to the showers. He called in Gary Peters to pitch...
...method is to spread his own gonorrhea among the wives of men on his private list of war criminals. But two diseases cannot beget health, and this does not ease his soul. Can he himself be guilty of something? He is harassed by a dog who has begun to follow him like a conscience-a magnificent black German shepherd who once belonged to Hitler and who is, by significant chance, the grandson of a bitch Matern owned...
...reversing state criminal decisions? Is it really soft on criminals? Is it unlawfully amending the Constitution? Harvard's Law School Dean Erwin N. Griswold told the Cleveland Bar Association last week that if anything, the court has been remarkably restrained in exercising its "clear responsibility" to make states follow the national standard set by the 14th Amendment under which "no state . . . shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process...
...battle scenes that follow have an eerie air of realism. Supporting the landing at Guadalcanal, the ship undergoes her first attack by Japanese aircraft. Sirens, bugles, bosun's pipes and klaxons sound while a single blinker flashes in the darkness. The voices of fighter pilots mingle with the staccato rat-a-tat of machine-gun bullets: "I see about 40 bandits . . . Red, where are you? Dusty, Dusty . . . Dusty's gone in." Then the big, 16-in. guns belch out billows of multicolored smoke...