Word: growed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...great. In a case about to be decided in court, it charges that P. & G. has violated the bounds of the Clayton Antitrust Act by competing too aggressively. The charge has put the hard-driving salesmen of P. & G. in a quandary: How can their company continue to grow if it is already big enough to be anticompetitive...
...drew his support from Centrist De Gaulle himself-and thus was decisive in forcing the runoff. His well-organized advertising campaign depicted him as the youthful symbol of France's future, a kind of French Kennedy ("John Fitzgerald Lecanuet," sneered the Gaullists). His toothsome telegenicity seemed to grow with each appearance on television, though he began the campaign a virtually unknown Senator. His theme was vive the Common Market, vive united Europe, vive NATO. It won the rare endorsement of "Mr. Europe" himself, Jean Monnet...
...mend fences with the regular military. The number of canh sat was doubled from 22,000 to the present 53,000, will total 72,000 by 1967-many of them trained by 144 U.S. policemen imported by AID's Public Safety Division. Eventually, the number may grow to 100,000 -enough to move in behind combat troops once an area is cleared of Viet...
...blanket, and Lucy and the rest of the kids provide Charlie with ornaments- and a little one-day-a-year love. The voices of the characters, dubbed by real rather than stage kids, are occasionally amateurish but contribute to the refreshingly low-key tone. In any case, listeners will grow accustomed to the voices. Three more Peanuts programs are on the drawing boards, and A Charlie Brown Christmas is one children's special this season that bears repeating...
...John C. Carr, predicts that if the present trend continues, local boards will be forced to reclassify "substantial numbers" of full time students. "It's a matter of which increases faster," says Carr, the "enlistments or the manpower requirements. Right now its too early to tell really which will grow more quickly." If students are inducted on a massive scale, Carr expects that the system of tests and class rankings used during the Korean war will be reinstituted. At that time, the armed forces drafted students who scored less than 70 per cent on a standardized examination and were...