Word: rosee
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Introspection." Though the news did not ruffle Wall Street (the Dow-Jones average actually rose 0.72 points the next day), it did disrupt Democrats' hopes of a whiz-bang windup to the 1966 campaign. For more than a week beforehand, White House officials had been filtering out information about an electioneering itinerary that would have allowed the President barely enough time in Washington to change his socks before bounding off on a "Boston-to-Austin" barnstorming blitz through more than a dozen states...
...needed in South Korea, where joun son means "good guest." At Seoul, more than 1,000,000 people -more than half of them schoolchildren-lined his 17-mile motorcade route, strewing it with thousands of chrysanthemums and a ton and a half of confetti. A forest of welcoming signs rose above their heads, many bearing bizarre, if well-intended, portraits of a green-faced, Oriental-eyed Lyndon Johnson with an outsized nose like Charles de Gaulle's. The slogans were on the inscrutable side. WELCOME TEXAS GRANDPA, said one. Another somewhat ambiguously proclaimed: TEXAS
Since mid-September, the hot, arid "Santa Ana winds" had whistled westward through the mountain passes half a dozen times, raising Los Angeles temperatures to unseasonable levels, unnerving residents, roasting the hillside shrubs and trees until they were tinder dry. As the winds rose once again last week, the stage was set for disaster...
...political manners he plans a come-back. FDR Jr. may not take coming back to mean anything to do with the presidency. He is interested in non-oblivion, respectable non-oblivion. To qualify, he entered the race as the Liberal candidate at the request of Liberal Party boss Alex Rose, who wanted a name on the ballot that would draw votes and insure the Liberals third-party status...
...that serve the pound. The tax is siphoning cash out of corporate treasuries at an annual rate of $2 billion, which is about one-fourth the amount that private industry normally invests in capital improvements. One other result of the deflationary policy has been a jump in unemployment, which rose last month by 100,000, to 370,000. Reflecting some Britons' fears of depression-style mass layoffs, one cartoonist drew a portly Wilson in a wide-lapelled 1930 suit with a breadline in the background. At the same time, the Labor government's spending has expanded despite Wilson...