Word: plowed
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...private company. The colors are the state's way of honoring the 125th anniversary of Moline's Deere & Co., whose distinctive green and yellow colors have for years identified its tractors, farm machinery and, lately, its light industrial equipment. After all, almost every inch of Illinois was plowed, furrowed, dug or smoothed at one time or another by some piece of Deere machinery. Since Blacksmith John Deere perfected the first steel plow in 1837-the plow that broke the plains-Deere has become the leading seller of farm equipment...
After years of sticking strictly to farm machinery, Deere moved into chemicals in 1954, two years later entered the industrial-equipment field with boom-or plow-equipped industrial tractors that perform every task from stacking logs to burying telephone cable. The company began moving overseas in 1956, now does a $64 million business from eight plants abroad. Next month it intends to enter the consumer market for the first time with a 7-h.p. lawn and garden tractor...
...Johnson & Johnson of New Brunswick, N.J., which gave $1,011,000, and Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc. of Nutley, N.J., a $1,132,000 donor, also plan to give their tax profits to charities. The Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Co. of Morris Plains, N.J., which contributed $1,500,000, intends to plow its tax profits back into basic research...
...Republicans held their Lincoln Day gatherings to honor the party's first winning presidential candidate. Much of what the speakers said was as predictable as what Democrats say at Jefferson-Jackson dinners. At Springfield, Ill., the voice of Senate Minority Leader Everett McKinley Dirksen summoned the party to "plow the long, hard furrow through which the Republican Party came to power and saved the Union in grave hours." Republican National Chairman William Miller thundered that the G.O.P. "must win in '64, or there won't be a country worth saving in '68." Arizona's Senator...
...this weren't enough, a pentateuchal plague of minor flaws will further beset your mind. The ships that plow the Suez Canal were all built after the second war to end all wars. The clothes that Arthur Kennedy (a newspaperman with about as much compassion and insight as the Mencken-figure of Inherit the Wind) wears are contemporary with the ships. The music that attacks you stereophonically from every angle is winningly simple-minded: four thousand strings equal desert motif; four thousand strings plus two harps equal sea motif. The beginning, which shows O'Toole meeting his death...