Word: frictioned
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Creole Leader Gaetan Duval agreed last February, after years of friction, to bring his followers into a coalition government with Premier Ramgoolam's party...
...their neighs, are selling briskly. Excitement, one of a score of recent books on horse racing, has sold 200,000 copies. Analyzing the craze, Tokyo Psychologist Kazuo Shimada suggests that it satisfies a psychic need in the world's most crowded country. "Merely living here," he says, "breeds friction, tension and frustration. Betting on the horses is a means of alleviating that pressure." As for the crush of the crowds, he adds: "Where interests are one and the same, we clannish Japanese delight in the multitude, finding in it not solitude but a soothing sense of belonging...
Despite the internal friction, the full committee did vote 17-11 against a motion to dissolve and, by a heavy majority vote, to protest the Committee on Rights and Responsibilities...
...secretary, Mrs. Evelyn Lincoln, for one-that Kennedy planned to replace him as vice-presidential candidate in 1964. It was well known that J.F.K. considered him vital in holding the South. Johnson also rejected-with less justification-contentions by Author William Manchester and others that there was friction with Kennedy people aboard Air Force One on the return from Dallas...
There is still occasional friction, such as organized racial rumbles after ball games. But there are signs of mutual acceptance. A black girl is one of the school's most popular cheerleaders. Mike Price, a black junior, is given a good chance to be elected student body president this spring. Four racially mixed couples are dating at Central and draw criticism not from fellow students but from middle-aged faculty members...