Word: itemizes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Chicago, mission uncertain. Two Keystone Korporals were flushed out of the bushes in a Chicago park as they watched a Yippie love festival. From such activities the Army compiled reports that were circulated to base commanders and law-enforcement officials. Some of the information relayed seemed ludicrous. One item warned of impending violence on the "Day of St. Lazar," when
...fourth item on yesterday's docket, the Committee of Fifteen's proposals for disciplinary rules and procedures, was postponed until a special meeting March...
...television's impact is being rapidly dissipated because the home screen has become so cluttered with commercials. In order to promote an avalanche of new products, advertisers often squeeze commercials for two or more products into a one-minute time slot that was formerly devoted to a single item. One critic, Herbert Maneloveg, vice president of Batten Barton Durstine and Osborn, reports that in 1964 there were 1,990 different commercials a month on network television, and more than 60% ran longer than 30 seconds. By 1968, TV was carrying 3,022 commercials in a month, and only...
...when it reaches him, probably this week. It was passed by the Senate overwhelmingly (74 to 17) last week and sent to the House for approval of a minor amendment. Congressional Democrats, claiming that they already have cut $5.6 billion from Nixon's requests, rate education as an item of top national priority and prefer that the Administration trim somewhere else in the fight against inflation. Their argument is a shade too righteous, since $600 million of the education money is for aid to schools where large numbers of Government workers strain local facilities. These schools are not always...
Columnist Arthur Hoppe's apocryphal news item as Spiro Agnew returned from his Asian and Pacific trip recently was not meant to be taken seriously. Neither was President Nixon's welcoming remark, in which he jocularly warned the Veep to "watch out how good you're getting." There is, nonetheless, a certain edge to the jesting these days. Spiro Agnew is emerging as a politician and a power in his own right as no Vice President-including Richard Nixon-ever...