Word: mckinleys
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...McKinley & I." Although his week was full of quips and quiddities, the President had his mind on serious subjects-and one of the most important was the problem of U.S. foreign trade. Kennedy plans to make liberalized foreign trade his Administration's major 1962 effort, and his N.A.M. appearance offered a perfect opportunity for starting the drive. "I understand," Kennedy told the businessmen, "that President McKinley and I are the only two Presidents of the United States to address such an occasion. I suppose that President McKinley and I are the only two that are regarded as fiscally sound...
...sniffle starts when the heroine, after playing house for a couple of days, gets pregnant. It gets louder when her lover tries to climb Mount McKinley and is killed. Rescued from suicide, the heroine spills the secret to her mother and father, who spirit her away to Guatemala...
Died. Countess Marguerite Cassini, 79, mother of Dress Designer Oleg Cassini and New York Society Columnist Igor ("Chol-ly Knickerbocker") Cassini, a spirited Russian matriarch who was the belle of Washington during the McKinley and Teddy Roosevelt Administrations, when her father was Czarist Ambassador to the U.S.; of a heart attack; in New York...
...Australia. Despite his adolescent antics. Ralston's graceful style and big serve made him one of the top favorites to beat out Australia's Rod Laver for the U.S. singles championship at Forest Hills this week. But just 24 hours after he and Partner Chuck McKinley (who was suspended and put on a year's probation for his conduct in the Davis Cup interzone finals in Australia last year) won the U.S. doubles championship at the Longwood Cricket Club in Chestnut Hill. Mass.. Dennis the Menace was suspended from the singles tournament...
...racket, slammed the ball into the net in disgust at his own errors, swore loudly as he fell after being faked out of position. The stern arbiters of the U.S.L.T.A. seemed unimpressed by Ralston's impeccable behavior at Longwood against the same Mexican team that beat him and McKinley at Cleveland. Nor were the prim chaperons of U.S. tennis moved by other reports that the Cleveland incident had been exaggerated. "Ralston's conduct on the court certainly is not angelic." said Olen Parks, who umpired the Cleveland match. "I do not approve of his attitude...