Word: p
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...CHARLES P. STETSON Fairfield, Conn...
...alone, Though it will take $90,000 to feed the tent town's planned population of 3,000 for a month, barely a third of that sum has been raised-despite sizable contributions from such chains as A. & P., Safeway and Giant Food, as well as promises of 850 loaves of bread a day from the baking industry and 1,500 half-pints of milk from local dairies. Discouraged by the turmoil, an abnormal cold snap and a driving rain that turned much of the camp site into a bog, more than 50 of the initial 500 settlers asked...
Died. William P. Kennedy, 76, head of the 200,000-man Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen from 1949 to 1962, remembered for a paralyzing strike during the Korean War; in Minneapolis. "We've won a tremendous victory," crowed Kennedy, whose call for a national strike in 1950 prompted the Government to take over the roads. Finally, in May 1951, the railroads threw in the towel, signed a contract giving Kennedy's men a $97 million-a-year wage increase...
Huvelle also snatched off the coveted William P. Grady Relay Anchor Award for his anchor leg in the mile relay during the Dartmouth meet, when he was nosed out in the stretch by an obscure Dartmouth pole vaulter...
...today: empty and unneeded. But medical research is only partially and indirectly responsible. There are just not enough people left who are unable to go to a private hospital or to choose their own doctors. "Medicare and medicaid have made obsolete the concept of charity medicine," says Dr. Andrew P. Sackett, Boston's Health and Hospitals Commissioner. The fact that City lies in Boston's oldest and most horrible slum somewhat obscures the meaning of this fact. There are people who do need a charity hospital; the small waiting room at City's admitting office is full of confused, bewildered...