Word: generously
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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When Kurashov had finished, Sihanouk rose with a bland smile to thank the Rus sians for their generous gift. Then, still smiling, he added pointedly: "Cambodia is prepared to accept aid from any nation. But this does not give the donor the right to meddle in our affairs." Then, ignoring all the fine new hospital facilities before him, Prince Sihanouk set off for Paris-for medical treatment...
...workers in the South, did nothing for housemaids or migrant farm workers. Congress raised the minimum to 75? in 1949, to $1 in 1955. This week Congress will try to resolve the wide differences between John Kennedy's bill, passed last week by the Senate, and a less generous House bill passed in June...
...option to purchase an additional i^ shares of United common at $40 per share within the next five years. All in all, since Capital seemed to be jet-propelled towards bankruptcy over its $33.8 million debt to Britain's Vickers-Armstrong Ltd. (TIME, April 25), the terms seemed generous. Said Pat Patterson: "I suppose we could have done better, but I didn't want to leave a trail of blood behind...
When Adon Taft goes to church, someone is forever mistaking him for the minister. The error is understandable because Taft looks and acts like one. He is tall, deacon-grave, bespectacled, softspoken; above his generous brow, from which the hair is steadily receding, there sometimes seems to hover a nimbus of reflected light. He neither smokes nor drinks, goes to church 200 times a year, is married to a church organist, and reads the Scriptures to his two young daughters. Taft's calling is not spiritual, except at one remove. Adon Taft, 34, is a working newsman...
...scares some of Texas' biggest oilmen who are engaged principally in primary production. Having heard the arguments of both sides, the Railroad Commission last week was trying to make up its mind. Best bet is that the commission will place limits on secondary production, too, but make them generous. "It gives them incentive," says William J. Murray Jr., a member of the three-man commission, "and it damned sure is conservation. We've got an oil surplus right now, but some day we're going to need it mighty...