Word: johnses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Eagleton has been in the Senate since 1968, and with all of his attractive qualities it is no surprise that he caught George McGovern's attention, though the two men did not become close friends. By all accounts, his behavior in the Senate and around Washington was exemplary. Understandably...
Common gossip says that youngsters are engaging in sexual intercourse earlier these days than they used to, but there has been precious little statistical evidence to back it up. Now Johns Hopkins Demographers Melvin Zelnik and John Kantner have come up with some firm data. After studying the sexual habits...
The reasons are not racial, according to Dr. Robert Cooke, chief of pediatrics at Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore. Says Cooke: "Intelligence is controlled by so many genes that it would be biologically impossible to allocate an aggregation of these by race. Since the genetic pattern is essentially the...
Without busing, the only real solution is neighborhood integration, which would take years to accomplish even if it were to be adopted as an all-out national goal-and that is unlikely. Since Johns Hopkins Sociologist James Coleman's celebrated study in 1966, all research has suggested that a...
A dropout from Johns Hopkins, Agnew studied law while working at Maryland Casualty Co. in the sprinkler-leakage department. After Army service in the war, he hung out his lawyer's shingle-and starved. Driven to the help wanted ads, he became assistant personnel manager at Schreibers', a...