Word: pleasing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...really necessary or desirable. Nowadays a labor dispute hardly seems to have any status at all unless Goldberg or his department is involved. This tends to down-rate all the ordinary processes of bargaining. But Goldberg's participation is frequently not entirely his doing: he gets so many "please help us" appeals from both management and labor that he rejects far more pleas than he accepts, insists that he enters only those situations that seem to have special significance for the economy. Settling the airline strikes over the third man in the cockpit, for example, would prove that even...
Lost Fervor. By this time, King has discovered that Albany will not give way as easily as did Montgomery, Ala. during his famous 1956 bus boycott. Albany's dominant whites, politicians and businessmen alike, have so far refused Negro appeals to establish even a basis of communication between the...
Across the U.S., some 250 condemned men are languishing behind bars, waiting to be executed for their crimes. Almost all of them could join in the lament of Paul Orville Crump, an inmate of Cook County (Ill.) jail: "I don't want to die. I want to live." To...
(2 of 10) Heath's declaration last year was a hopeful echo of Winston Churchill's ringing pleas for European unity in the 1940s-but also a bitter reminder that even Churchill had never brought his people to share his vision.
The man who said Hoffa had slugged him was Samuel Baron, 59, the 5-ft. 6½-in., 152-lb. field director of the Teamsters' warehouse division. Baron told how he and labor's little Napoleon had been feuding for years. During an argument in the union'...