Word: puebloed
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...such as a call for obedience "to the principles of the National Movement"), "the right of freedom of expression of ideas" is clearly stated in Article One. "When you talk about freedom of the press, the essential point is that newspapers have the right to criticize the government," asserts Pueblo Editor Emilio Romero. "That right we will now have. The Press Law will have the effect of stimulating further liberalization in our society." Editors are less happy about the law's provisions that all journalists be graduates of journalism school: many of the best now working...
...would think of those bones at bed time. We all became kind of fond of him," said Lynda Bird Johnson, 21, after spending ten days pecking away with trowel, whisk broom and dental pick to unearth a fragile, 700-year-old skeleton in a kiva (chamber) of an ancient Pueblo Indian settlement in wildest Arizona. Lynda roughed it with a team from the University of Arizona excavating near a place called Grasshopper. And while she was rolling that wheelbarrow around, guess what Sister Luci Baines was doing for wheels back in Washington: varooming through town...
Beards of a feather? Not really. The beard on the new Cuban 13-centavo stamp belonged not to Fidel but to Abraham Lincoln, whose likeness appeared below his famous admonition: "Se puede engahar a todo el pueblo parte del tiempo, se puede engahar a parte del pueblo todo el tiempo, pero no se puede engahar a todo el pueblo todo el tiempo." The lines-more familiar to Americans as "You may fool all of the people some of the time," etc.-were obviously meant to refer to the Yanquis. Cubans may just possibly apply them to someone else...
...Huddled Pueblo. During most of its existence, from 6500 to 5700 B. C.- dates determined by carbon 14 dating -the city must have looked like an Indian pueblo of the U.S. Southwest, its mud-brick buildings huddled together in a single mass. They had the same doorless outside walls, and were entered by ladders through their flat roofs. There were no streets, and only a few small courtyards. Çatal Hiiyuk may have been well-designed for defense, but its comfort was questionable and its sanitation offensive...
...errant printer in Pueblo, Colo., changed his last name to Runyon. An editor on Hearst's American eliminated the Alfred...