Word: goldings
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Word He Can Use. Like all the other Republican Governors and Governors-elect, Reagan spent the weekend at Colorado Springs. Alighting from one of two private jets that carried a party of 13, he rejected the gaudy gold Cadillacs (complete with seat warmers) that ferried the other participants, plopped himself instead into a sober blue limousine...
...jockey, with brown hair that flows down his head and wraps around his ears. A thin colorless face. But it's the clothes you look at. His pants. Unbelievable. A garden of paisley. Blue for the background. Quietly blue. And then WATCH OUT. Silver paisley and red and gold, all at once. Moving when he moves. Moving when he doesn't move. Baby baby baby says the radio...
...clothes all the time. In your closet. On your back. It's the colors. Like, colors are beautiful, you know? That's the first thing people who take LSD talk about. The colors. Look at these pants. The blue background is happening. And then the red and silver and gold. I think it's groovy. God just didn't give anyone pants like that. Some guy worked hard to think this up. And nobody appreciates it. Everybody should accept everybody else. I mean, what right have they got to judge my clothes? I like Mod. I like the freedom...
Housekeeping Pictures. Other scientists had other interpretations. Cornell University Astronomer Thomas Gold, who believes that Copernicus was formed, like most other lunar craters, by the impact of a meteorite, theorizes that its smooth floor consists of compacted dustlike material that is continually being knocked off crater walls by micrometeorites. U.S. Geological Survey Geologists John McCaulay and Richard Eggleton were fascinated by the apparent presence of erosion channels on the far wall of the crater. They suggest that the channels may have been formed by solid particles flowing down the crater wall...
...turned out that way. Exports rose only $93 million from July through October, and Britain's gold and foreign currency reserves went up only $64 million last month. Meanwhile, the production index in October fell 3%, worst plunge in four years. Capital investment is declining, primarily because businessmen lack confidence in the economic future. Even Wilson's best friends have begun to tell him off. Last week the Socialist-leaning New Statesman called his deflationary policy "the most reactionary kind of bankers' philosophy," and asked rhetorically: "How long can we afford Harold Wilson...