Word: frederick
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Those Salvation Army sidewalk bands of organ, trumpet, trombone and tambourine have been dispensing the same melody-worn music since everyone was a child. But times change, and in his first press conference as commanding officer, General Frederick Coutts, 64, told startled London reporters: "I am going to get with it. Oh my, yes. If we want to attract young folk, we have to go where they are, to the coffee bars, to their haunts. I can see us making use of all kinds of music-guitars and banjos, and that sort of thing. If we have to adapt...
Born. To Lucy Douglas Cochrane Ceezee") Guest, 43, high society's reigning queen, and Winston Frederick Churchill Guest, 57, Long Island polo player, Phipps steel heir: their second child, first daughter (Guest has two grown sons from a previous marriage); in Manhattan...
...said he could, and Teddy, who had flown up earlier, told his father the next morning. Said Boles afterward, "He took it with characteristic courage." The night of the assassination, Caroline and John Jr. were told that their father was dead. A Cedar Felled. In the U.S. Senate, Chaplain Frederick Brown Harris mounted the rostrum and placed a single sheet of scrawled notes before him. "We gaze at a vacant place against the sky," he said, "as the President of the Republic goes down like a giant cedar." Then he recalled the words that Ohio Representative James A. Garfield spoke...
This elusiveness makes neutrinos hard to deal with. Though scientists have been convinced that the particles exist, they were not directly detected until 1956 when Physicists Frederick Reines and Clyde Cowan Jr., of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, set up a monstrous apparatus near the Atomic Energy Commission's Savannah River reactor, which looses vast floods of neutrinos. A few times each hour while the reactor was working, the detector registered an "event." This meant that a single neutrino, out of many billions of billions per second, had actually hit something...
...wrote Professor Frederick C. Barghoorn in The Soviet Image of the United States more than a decade ago. The words proved prophetic last week when the Russians announced that Barghoorn, 52, longtime chairman of Yale's Russian studies program, was under arrest for "espionage." Then, as suddenly as it began, Moscow called off its seemingly pointless exercise. After being held in a Moscow prison for 16 days, the scholar was released and expelled from Russia...